Greek army specialists on Thursday destroyed an unexploded World War II bomb discovered during work on a massive urban development project at a coastal area south of Athens.
Greek authorities discovered the 500-pound bomb was destroyed without a detonation after traffic in the area was halted for more than two hours.
Greek army specialists on Thursday destroyed an unexploded World War II bomb discovered during work on a massive urban development project at a coastal area south of Athens.
Authorities said the 500-pound bomb was destroyed without a detonation after traffic in the area was halted for more than two hours and several nearby apartment blocks had been evacuated as a precaution.
The urban development project will include a park, shopping malls, hotels, a casino and multiple leisure facilities near the seaside Glyfada area, south of the capital. Work got underway last year and is due to be completed in 2026.
“Everything went well, and we thank all the agencies involved: the specialised army unit, the fire department and the traffic police,” Glyfada Mayor Giorgos Papanikolaou told reporters near the site.
“As the excavations progress, more unexploded ordnance may be discovered.”
The development project will use land that was previously the site of Athens' international airport before it was closed in 2001 and moved to a new location. The site also hosted several sporting venues during the Athens Olympics in 2004 and briefly housed a camp for asylum seekers during the refugee crisis of 2015-16.
The airfield has also been used for decades to support a United States military base that closed in the early 1990s.
During World War II and the Nazi-led occupation of Greece, the airfield was bombed by the allies.