To compensate for the lack of water, pipes will make more than 400 trips a day in the next 72 hours; The most affected Mayor’s Office will be Gustavo A. Madero with 111 neighborhoods that will present a lack of supply.
Mexico City, February 10 (However).- The Mexico City Water System (Sacmex) advertisement he cutout to the supply of water in several capital colonies Due to the repair of a tube of concrete prestressed by a drain occurred in the Branch Aqueduct Teoloyucan and Ramala Tizayuca-Pachuca.
The water cut will be for 48 hours due to the fracture in the installation that distributes the resource to the Chalmita tank, for the Gustavo A. Madero, Azcapotzalco and Venustiano Carranza municipalities.
According to the list released by Sacmex, neighborhoods belonging to Gustavo A. Madero —the most affected Mayor’s Office— such as La Joya, Belisario Domínguez, Residencial Zacatenco, San Juan de Aragón and Vallejo will present cuts.
For its part, in Azcapotzalco there will be effects in towns such as Industrial Vallejo, La Raza, Coltongo, Ferrería, among others. The Venustiano Carranza Mayor’s Office is the least affected, only presenting water cuts in the Pensador Mexicano, Arenal I and Arenal II neighborhoods.
To compensate for the lack of water in the towns of the capital, Sacmex announced the deployment of a support operation for the free supply of drinking water through 150 pipes during the next 72 hours, which will carry out three trips per day, giving a total of approximately 450 services per day.
Likewise, there will be two pipe distribution points in the following locations:
– Cinvestav: Av. Politécnico Nacional 2508, San Pedro Zacatenco.
– Esplanade of the Mayor: Calle 5 de febrero s/n, Villa Gustavo A. Madero.
You can consult the COMPLETE LIST of colonies affected below:
⚠️SACMEX reports on the cut in the supply of drinking water, derived from the work to repair a water leak in the Aqueduct of the Teoloyucan Branch and Tizayuca-Pachuca Branch by CONAGUA.⚠️ pic.twitter.com/BaLmLCvzgd
— Mexico City Water System (@SacmexCDMX) February 10, 2023