China opens world’s longest sea bridge near Qingdao
02 July BBC
China has opened the world’s longest sea bridge to general traffic.
The bridge spans 42.4km (26.3 miles) to connect the eastern coastal
city of Qingdao to the suburb of Huangdao, in Jiaozhou Bay.
State media say the bridge passed construction tests on Monday and it
opened to traffic on Thursday, along with an undersea tunnel.
The bridge would easily cross the English Channel, which is 32km wide
at its narrowest point.
It is 4km longer than the previous record-holder, the Lake
Pontchartrain Causeway in the US state of Louisiana.
It took four years to build and state media say the project cost over
10bn yuan ($1.55bn; £970m). The bridge is supported on more than 5,200
pillars.
It is expected to carry more than 30,000 cars a day, and will
reportedly cut the commuting time between Qingdao and Huangdao by up to
30 minutes.
However, this cross-sea bridge may not hold on to the record as the
world’s longest.
In 2009, China began work on a bridge linking southern Guangdong
province, China’s main manufacturing hub, with Hong Kong and Macau.
However, only 35km of that structure - set to open in 2016 - will
actually be above water.
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