2nd sinkhole in days raises concerns in Holladay neighborhood


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • A second sinkhole on Nila Way in Holladay has alarmed residents.
  • The issue likely stems from a water line break earlier this month.
  • Salt Lake City crews are addressing the problem to prevent further collapses.

HOLLADAY — A second sinkhole in less than two weeks has alarmed residents along Nila Way in Holladay, where the street has collapsed twice near 4100 South and 2900 East.

The first incident occurred shortly after a resident noticed an unusual sound on June 4.

On Wednesday, a second depression appeared in nearly the same location, prompting a renewed response from Salt Lake City utility crews.

Helen Vilas, who has lived on Nila Way for 38 years, witnessed the first collapse.

"We saw the whole thing collapse," Vilas said. "It was shocking to watch."

A sinkhole is pictured on Nila Way in Holladay. Two sinkholes have appeared in the area in the past two weeks.
A sinkhole is pictured on Nila Way in Holladay. Two sinkholes have appeared in the area in the past two weeks. (Photo: Maria Shilaos, KSL NewsRadio)

City crews repaired the initial sinkhole, but the new depression — approximately 2 feet wide and 2 feet deep — has raised fresh concerns among neighbors.

Jesse Stewart, deputy director of public utilities for Salt Lake City, said the issue likely stems from a water line break earlier this month.

"What we had out there is, we had a water line break back in early June. It was repaired on June 6," Stewart said. "This new depression is probably the result of water from that break running underground and creating a void."

Despite the smaller size of the second collapse, Stewart emphasized that the city is taking no chances.

Crews work to repair a sinkhole on Nila Way in Holladay on Wednesday. This is the second sinkhole in this area in two weeks.
Crews work to repair a sinkhole on Nila Way in Holladay on Wednesday. This is the second sinkhole in this area in two weeks. (Photo: Maria Shilaos, KSL NewsRadio)

"They're going to go back over it ... excavate down, put in good backfill, compact it and put new asphalt down," he said.

Bradley Nordegren, another longtime resident, said he's relieved to see the crews back at work.

"Hopefully they'll find the source of the problem and fix it so it doesn't keep happening," Nordegren said.

Stewart urged residents to report any signs of road buckling or collapse immediately.

"If people see anything unusual, they should call public works right away," he said.

Salt Lake City Public Utilities can be reached at (801) 483-6700 or online at www.slc.gov/utilities .

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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