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World’s highest bridge to open to traffic in China’s mountainous southwest

The Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge in Guizhou rises around 625 metres above a river to around the same height as the Shanghai Tower

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The Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge in southwest China took three years to build. Photo: Xinhua
Dannie Pengin Beijing

A bridge described by Chinese state media as the world’s highest will open to traffic on Sunday in the mountainous southwestern province of Guizhou.

The suspension bridge, which took three years to build, crosses the Huajiang Grand Canyon and is intended to cut travel times across the gorge from two hours to just a few minutes, state news agency Xinhua reported.

Guizhou is already home to almost half the world’s 100 tallest bridges, and the latest project rises 625m (2,050ft) from the river below to its bridge deck.

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This is about the same height as mainland China’s tallest skyscraper, the Shanghai Tower, and around 60m higher than the previous record holder, the Duge Bridge, which is about 200km (120 miles) away.

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Load test done on world’s tallest bridge in China’s southwestern Guizhou province

Load test done on world’s tallest bridge in China’s southwestern Guizhou province

In crossing the Huajiang Grand Canyon – known as the “Earth’s crack” due to its incredibly deep and narrow gorge – the bridge is also set to become the longest mountain bridge in the world, with a total length of 2,890m.

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Its main span is 1,420m – 10m longer than Britain’s Humber Bridge, which was the world’s longest single-span suspension bridge until 1998 – according to the website highestbridges.com.

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