'Lovers' Arch' collapses on Valentine's Day on Italy's Adriatic coast - GRIF MAG

ShowBiz & Sports News

Hot

Monday, February 16, 2026

'Lovers' Arch' collapses on Valentine's Day on Italy's Adriatic coast

'Lovers' Arch' collapses on Valentine's Day on Italy's Adriatic coast

ROME, Feb 16 (Reuters) - A famous rock structure on Italy's Adriatic coast known as the "Lovers' Arch" collapsed ‌on Valentine's Day after days of bad weather, prompting ‌local officials to warn that other stretches of the fragile coastline could ​be at risk.

Reuters A drone view of the Torre Sant'Andrea (known as the Love Arch), in Lecce, Italy, May 23, 2017, in this screengrab obtained from social media. Aerialpictures.it/via REUTERS A drone view of the Torre Sant'Andrea (known as the Love Arch), in Lecce, Italy, May 23, 2017, in this screengrab obtained from social media. Aerialpictures.it/via REUTERS

Drone view of Italy's 'Love Arch'

The natural arch, part of the Sant'Andrea sea stacks near the town of Melendugno in the southern region of Puglia, had long been a popular backdrop for wedding proposals ‌and tourist photos.

"This ⁠is an unwanted Valentine's Day gift," Melendugno Mayor Maurizio Cisternino told the local Corriere Salentino newspaper, ⁠calling the collapse "a very hard blow" for the area's image and for tourism.

Cisternino said days of heavy rain, strong winds and ​rough ​seas had battered the coastline ​and ultimately destroyed the arch. "Nature ‌has taken back what it created," he said.

Advertisement

Officials have warned that other parts of the rocky coastline could also collapse, with cracks visible along the cliff, underscoring the growing threat of coastal erosion.

Storms and heavy rain in recent days ‌have also eaten away at long ​stretches of coastline on the Ionian ​Sea, from Ugento to ​the beaches of Gallipoli, damaging beach structures, ‌causing small cliff falls and harming ​ports.

Weeks of ​terrible weather this year have also caused damage estimated at well over a billion euros in southern Italy, including ​a landslide that ‌has forced more than 1,500 people to evacuate ​their homes in the Sicilian town of Niscemi.

(Reporting by ​Crispian BalmerEditing by Ros Russell)