 A short-term rapid subsidence event took place in the Baiguiyuan community in Bali-Tai town, Tangin City, which led to the tilting of high-rise buildings and the emergency evacuation of over 3,000 residents. In response to this incident, interferometric synthetic aperture radar, in SAR, technology was swiftly employed to monitor the subsidence in the area before and after the event. Our observations indicate that the region had maintained stability for eight months prior to the incident. However, over the course of the 15-day event, the ground experienced more than 10 millimeters of subsidence. By integrating the findings from an NSAR analysis with geological studies, we speculate that the rapid subsidence in the region is related to the extraction of geothermal resources. It is suspected that during drilling operations, the wellbore mistakenly penetrated a massive underground karst cavity. Consequently, this resulted in a sudden rapid leakage of drilling fluid, creating a pressure differential that caused the overlying soil layers to collapse and rapidly sink into the cavity. As a result, short-term rapid subsidence on the ground surface and tilting of high-rise buildings occurred. This article was authored by Haonan Jiang, Timo Balls, Jianan Li, and others. We are article.tv, links in the description below.