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San Francisco's famous Golden Gate Bridge now makes creepy loud music

No, the weird sounds coming from the bridge aren't paranormal.

Bonnie Burton
Journalist Bonnie Burton writes about movies, TV shows, comics, science and robots. She is the author of the books Live or Die: Survival Hacks, Wizarding World: Movie Magic Amazing Artifacts, The Star Wars Craft Book, Girls Against Girls, Draw Star Wars, Planets in Peril and more! E-mail Bonnie.
Bonnie Burton
2 min read
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San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge is making eerie new sounds. 

James Martin/CNET

If you visit or live near the Golden Gate Bridge, you might notice new, unusual sounds coming from the San Francisco landmark. While it's fun to think the famous Bay Area bridge is haunted, with ghostly communications coming through loud and clear, the real reason for the weird sounds is mundane. 

Apparently, the city recently installed new sidewalk railing slats to better handle wind resistance on the bridge. But no one anticipated that the wind passing through the slats would also make significant noise not just on the bridge, but also miles away.

"Can someone explain me why is this eerie sound has been going on for an hour in San Francisco," one person tweeted from the Presidio.

When residents living near the bridge tweeted about hearing the unusual sounds, San Francisco 311, the city's official information and customer service center, posted an explanation. 

"The Golden Gate Bridge Sargent reports the low humming noise is related to high winds blowing through the newly installed railing slats along the bike path on the bridge," San Francisco 311 tweeted on Friday.

"The Golden Gate Bridge has started to sing," Paolo Cosulich-Schwartz of the Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District, said in a statement on Saturday. "The new musical tones coming from the bridge are a known and inevitable phenomenon that stem from our wind retrofit during very high winds."

Basically, when the wind passes through the new sidewalk slats, it turns the bridge into a giant reed instrument. 

"As part of the design process, the district did extensive studies on the impacts of the project, including wind tunnel testing of a scale model of the Golden Gate Bridge under high winds," Cosulich-Schwartz added. The new wind retrofit  was "necessary to ensure the safety and structural integrity of the bridge."

Officials say there aren't any planned fixes for the humming issue, according to a news report from SFGate. Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

While some people enjoy the creepy concert whenever the wind picks up, not everyone shares the sentiment about the new musical offerings.

"This is going to seriously cause people to lose their minds. Possibly me," one person tweeted. Tweeted another, "Kinda beautiful.... as long as you're just visiting and not living within earshot. That would drive me nuts!" 

Here are a few tweets from people who captured videos of the eerie bridge sounds. 

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