In July, China will debut the world’s longest and highest glass-bottom
bridge for thrill-seeking tourists to get one-of-a-kind views of the
Wulingyuan area.
The bridge is nearly 1,000 feet above ground. (Haim Dotan Ltd. Architects and Urban Designers)
Located
in Zhangjiajie, a scenic national park in the country's Hunan province,
the record-breaking construction is the work of award-winning Israeli
architect Haim Dotam, best known for his ecologically-minded designs
throughout the world.
Spanning 1,410 feet long, 20 feet across
and hovering 984 feet above the ground, the new transparent walkway will
be the largest of its kind ever built. The suspension bridge consists
of two side steel beams with a structural glass deck and hanging side
stay cables. Dotan estimates that the bridge will be able to hold up to
800 people at once.
“As the designer of this bridge, located in
an incredible and magical national park,I believe in nature, harmony,
balance and beauty. Nature is beautiful as is, one wants to make the
least impact upon it,” Dotan said in a press release.
Stunning views from the Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge. (Haim Dotan Ltd. Architects and Urban Designers)
“The Zhangjiajie Glass Bridge was designed to be invisible as possible--a white bridge disappearing into the clouds."
To
compare, the Grand Canyon Skywalk in the U.S. is just 69 feet long and
sits 718 feet about the canyon floor. Last year, Canada opened its
Glacier Skywalk in Alberta which stretches 115 feet from the cliff.
The
bridge will afford tourists a world class view of the striking
landscape that includes many sandstone and quartz cliff often dotted
with trees and waterfalls.
If simply walking across a clear
floor hundreds of feet in the air isn’t thrilling enough, the Grand
Canyon of Zhangjiajie skywalk will also house the world’s highest bungee
jump when completed. That current honor goes to Macau Tower’s 764-foot
high jump.
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