

They built a canal to connect two seas. The railroads said 'hold my beer.'
Not everyone who nowadays drives on the A73 between Nuremberg and Bamberg knows that they are travelling on a former waterway. Still half a century ago, the old Ludwig-Main-Danube-Canal (in short: Ludwig-Canal) was located here, which represented the last puzzle piece to a navigable connection between the oceans. Build within a remarkable ten years’ time of construction, the canal, which was opened in 1846, was the realization of a small dream of humanity as it finally connected the North Sea with the Black Sea. Unfortunately, the idea could not support itself financially: Too powerful were the railroads, which saw its rise simultaneously, and which soon undermined the ambitious canal project’s future as they were in every regard the faster, more comfortable, and better means of transportation of the hour.
Production
Uncovering invisible history buried under a modern highway.
Sound
Tuba accompaniment to industrial decline—unexpectedly moving.
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The Ludwig Canal represents Germany's first major infrastructure folly—completed just in time to become immediately irrelevant, a pattern some might recognize in modern tech.
The canal's remnants are now a protected ecosystem, meaning nature succeeded where commerce failed. poetic justice or ecological consolation prize?
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