• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

The World’s Longest Bridge Stretches 164 Kilometers Across China

February 5, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Bridges come in all shapes and sizes: from the world’s longest suspension bridge that connects Europe and Asia, to India’s ingenious bridges made of living roots. However, the Danyang-Kunshan Grand Bridge in China holds not one, but two titles for both the longest and second-longest bridge in the world.

Forming part of the Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed Railway, the Danyang-Kunshan Grand Bridge in China connects Shanghai and Nanjing to form the world’s longest bridge. This impressive feat of engineering stretches for a whopping 164.8 kilometers (102.4 miles) and traverses rice paddies, lakes, rivers, and even cities.

Advertisement

Running parallel to the Yangtze River from its mouth in Shanghai, the bridge has an average height of 100 meters (328 feet) – but, as it’s designed to allow ships to pass underneath it, some areas of the bridge have a clearance of 150 meters (492 feet).

Due to its length and the differences in terrain beneath the bridge, it is technically both a viaduct and a cable-stayed bridge in different sections. Viaducts are characterized as bridges that are supported by a series of towers or arches beneath the bridge, while cable-stayed bridges are supported by diagonal, tension-straight cables that run from towers above the bridge.

The Danyang–Kunshan Grand Bridge is so long that a sub-section of the bridge, known as the Langfang–Qingxian viaduct, can even be considered the second longest bridge in the world with a length of 114 kilometers (70.8 miles).

The completion of the Danyang–Kunshan Grand Bridge in 2011, after just four short years of construction, has transformed railway travel in the area by reducing a 4-hour 30-minute journey from Nigbo to Jiaxing down to just 2 hours by train.

Advertisement

Costing a staggering $8.5 billion to build – that’s $51 million per kilometer – the entire bridge is made up of around hundreds of thousands of tonnes of steel and is supported by roughly 11,500 concrete pillars. One section of the bridge alone uses 2,000 pillars to cross Yangcheng Lake in Suzhou.

Despite the comparatively speedy construction, the bridge has been built to withstand a host of natural disasters that have been known to affect the area such as earthquakes and typhoons, as well as being equipped to take on a direct 300,000-tonne hit from a navy vessel. The bridge’s estimated lifespan is over 100 years.

Not only has the bridge improved the function of public transport for the region, but it has also become a tourist attraction in its own right, with people travelling from around to world to experience the picturesque views from this surprisingly short train ride.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Kobe Bryant designed and signed Hublot watch hits the auction block
  2. Japan, citing ‘shared values’, welcomes Taiwan trade pact application
  3. Ukrainian police arrest hacker who caused $150 million damage to global firms
  4. Formula Calculate Any Digit Of Pi, Nobody Noticed For Centuries

Source Link: The World’s Longest Bridge Stretches 164 Kilometers Across China

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Electroacupuncture Is Acupuncture’s Livelier Cousin – But Does It Work?
  • Myth, Mess, and Mitochondria: How The Biggest Bird To Ever Exist Evolved And Died In Madagascar
  • Why Do Leftovers Taste Better The Next Day?
  • “There’s The Potential For Life To Exist”: Where Is Life Most Likely To Be In The Solar System?
  • Are Cold Sores Really Linked To Alzheimer’s Disease? Here’s What The Experts Are Saying
  • Meet The Subalpine Woolly Rat, Photographed And Documented In The Wild For The First Time
  • Hairless Bear: The True Story Behind The Viral Image Of A Bald Bear
  • World’s Largest Iceberg Set To Lose Its Title As It Disintegrates Into “Starry Night” Of Ice
  • Six Living Relatives Of Leonardo Da Vinci Have Been Identified Using DNA, Claims New Book
  • This Neanderthal Skull Cave Was Used To Stash Heads For Generations
  • “Improbable” Planet Is Orbiting A Stellar Odd-Couple The Wrong Way Round
  • Snooze Alarms Are Bad For Us, So Why Can’t We Quit Them?
  • Watch A Rare Gobi Bear Finally Find Water After A 160-Kilometer Trek Through A “Waterless Place”
  • Jupiter, The Largest Planet In Our Solar System, Was Once Twice As Big
  • The US Ran A Solar Storm Emergency Drill And It Suggested The Real Thing Would Be Catastrophic
  • “Under UV Light, The Bone Glows Brightly”: A Fluorescent Archaeopteryx Just Changed Our Understanding Of The Evolution Of Flight
  • Perfect Sphere Of Plasma Discovered In Space Is A Conundrum Waiting To Be Solved
  • What Happened In The First Human-To-Human Heart Transplant?
  • Having An “Aha!” Moment When Solving A Puzzle “Almost Doubles” Your Memory
  • What’s Your Chronotype, And Why Should You Care?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version