- Powerful waves damaged the coastal road in Gouves
- Part of the roadway collapsed after days of intense wave impact
- Debris and sea materials covered the road, creating dangerous conditions
- Winds reached up to 10 Beaufort across Crete
- Fire services responded to 31 fallen tree incidents island-wide
- The mayor of Hersonissos has requested urgent intervention
- Long-term coastal erosion remains unresolved
- Repairs are racing against the start of the tourist season
After days of relentless wave action, Gouves woke up to a coastal front that looked less like a seaside promenade and more like a post-impact zone. The waves lifted sections of the road, pushing stones, wood, and debris onto the asphalt.
Access became hazardous. In parts, the roadway gave way.
This is not the first time.
Only days before, damage had already been recorded. The coastal road has long stood exposed — and increasingly vulnerable — to erosion and extreme weather events.
10 Beaufort Across Crete
Western winds reached up to 10 on the Beaufort scale in some areas. The Fire Service reported:
- 13 fallen-tree incidents in Heraklion
- 10 in Chania
- 4 in Rethymno
- 4 in Lasithi
- 31 interventions island-wide
In Gouves, the storm surge erased the boundary between land and sea. Waves crossed the shoreline and submerged the road, creating dangerous conditions for drivers.
Authorities have since:
- Cleared debris from the roadway
- Blocked the section where the collapse occurred
- Placed the area under monitoring
The Bigger Problem No One Can Ignore
Beyond immediate repairs lies the chronic issue: coastal erosion.
The mayor of Hersonissos has submitted an urgent intervention request to the relevant land authorities. Yet what residents continue to demand is not patchwork — but a comprehensive, permanent study addressing the structural vulnerability of the coastal artery.
With tourist season approaching, repairs are now a race against time.
Crete markets its coastline as paradise.
But when 10 Beaufort winds arrive, nature reminds everyone who owns the shoreline.
This is no longer an isolated weather story.
It is infrastructure meeting climate reality.