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The world's most frightening suspension bridges


Lmws214
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https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/suspension-bridges-frightening/index.html

 

 

It's just physics. Friendly civil engineering.

 

These are the fourteen:-

 

 

 

1. Frighteningly transparent: ZHANGJIAJIE GLASS BRIDGE
Where: Zhangjiajie, China
When: Opened in 2016
Whoa: World's highest glass-bottomed suspension bridge
Anyone can stare out of a very high window. But standing on one -- coaxing your feet onto a glassy surface suspended above nearly 1,000 feet of air takes some serious spine.
Especially in Hunan, home to the world's record-setting glass-floored pedestrian bridge.
Hanging between a pair of mountain cliffs in Zhangjiajie National Forest Park's Grand Canyon Scenic Area, this 1,410-foot-long span was until recently the world's longest glass bridge.
But ask anyone venturing onto its triple layered, steel-frame-supported, sledgehammer-tested, crystal-clear span levitating 984 feet above an all too visible canyon floor. It's still the highest.

 

 

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2. Frighteningly pane-pushing: HONGYAGU SCENIC AREA BRIDGE
Where: Shijiazhuang, China
When: Opened in 2017
Whoa: World's longest glass-bottomed suspension bridge
Just when you think China's glass bridge ceiling has been reached, along comes the latest record shatterer.
Stretching more than 1,600 feet, the world's longest glass-panel suspension bridge spans a scenic valley floor adorned with mountains, waterfalls and ancient temples in northeastern China's Hebei province.
Up to 600 visitors are permitted on the 715-foot-high bridge at any one time, which has been designed to permit a slight "sway" for an extra unnecessary thrill.
Special "shoe gloves" are provided to protect against damage to the glass floor panels -- along with special support staff positioned at various points along the bridge to protect against damage to visitors' far more fragile psyches.

3. Frighteningly bouncy: CAPILANO SUSPENSION BRIDGE
Where: North Vancouver, British Columbia
When: The original bridge dates to 1889.
Whoa: It's suspended 230 feet above the Capilano River.
Although the original 1889 bridge constructed of hemp rope and cedar planks has long since been replaced with wire cables and concrete reinforcements, crossing this foot bridge suspended high above the Capilano River involves just enough bounce to make even the most nonchalant crosser a little nervous.
Add dozens of visitors simultaneously coming and going along the narrow stretch -- a frequent occurrence during the park's busy holiday lights season -- and anyone with a keen sense of catastrophe and vague "Indiana Jones" recollections won't want to waste much time oohing and aahing over the Pacific rainforest scenery.
But that would be a shame. The foliage-fresh air is perfect for a deep, calming breath.

4. Frighteningly gorge-ous: ROYAL GORGE BRIDGE
Where: Colorado, USA
When: First opened (for a thrilling 75-cent toll) in 1929
Whoa: Still America's highest suspension bridge after nearly 90 years
Built in a mere six months for a thrifty-sounding $350,000 (that reportedly was $100,000 over budget), Cañon City, Colorado's top tourist attraction would claim "world's highest bridge" honors for more than 70 years until China's bridge projects began pushing to new apogees this century.
Suspended 956 feet over the Arkansas River, the 1,280-foot-long, 1,292-wooden-planked steel-base-structure was reinforced in the early 1980s with new cable anchors and suspension rods -- recently surviving a 2013 wildfire.
Home to a gorge-side amusement park, the bridge is accompanied by an aerial gondola ride, a Royal Rush Skycoaster plunge and a whoosh along America's highest zipline, if a walk or after-hours drive across this chasm isn't quite harrowing enough.
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5. Frighteningly alp-in-your-face: CHARLES KUONEN SUSPENSION BRIDGE
Where: Randa, Switzerland
When: Opened in 2017
Whoa: World's longest pedestrian suspension bridge
When it opened in July 2017, the Charles Kuonen Suspension Bridge was dubbed "the world's longest pedestrian suspension bridge" by Zermatt Tourism, a lofty claim that no other tourism board on either side of the Swiss Alps has dared to refute.
Hanging across a forested alpine valley near the resort town of Zermatt, the bridge marks the climactic final leg of the signature Haute Route trek through the French and Swiss Alps.
Measuring 1,621 feet long and 25 inches narrow, the bridge reaches a height of just under 279 feet somewhere in the middle section. But who's really looking down to make sure exactly where?
An easier view from up here: staring across the valley for wide-angle vistas of the iconic Matterhorn summit.
 
 
6. Frighteningly high: SIDU RIVER BRIDGE
Where: Hubei, China
When: Blowing trans-China commuters' minds since 2009
Whoa: World's highest suspension bridge
Perched between two bright yellow towers above a yawning river valley in the rugged mountains of central China, the world's second highest bridge (to China's cable-stayed Duge Bridge) looks like something miraculously dropped into perfect position from the sky.
How else could this 4,009-foot-long, 71-sectioned, 20-years-in-the-making, acrophobia-inducing linchpin of a new east-west expressway between Shanghai and Chengdu have been pulled off?
Answer: With some nifty rocket science -- using military-grade rockets to string its pilot cables. That's a suspension bridge construction first.
 
 
7. Frighteningly extensive and expensive: AKASHI KAIKYŌ BRIDGE
Where: Kobe, Japan
When: Collecting steep tolls since 1998
Whoa: World's longest suspension bridge
What's scarier on the world's longest suspension bridge: the drive or the toll?
Conceived after the 1950s sinking of two passenger ferries in the nasty Akashi Strait below, the 2.5-mile-long bridge will set most cars back at least 2,300 yen ($21), eclipsing other famously steep suspension bridge tolls like New York's Verrazano-Narrows ($17), San Francisco's Golden Gate ($7.75) and Turkey's Ozman Gazi (65.65 Turkish Lira).
Enforced with a dual-hinged girder system to withstand 178 mph winds, 8.5-magnitude earthquakes and hostile sea currents, the remarkably resilient structure connecting Kobe and Awaji Island sees more than 23,000 daily cars that know a scarily solid investment when they cross one.
 
 
8. Frighteningly low: STORMS RIVER SUSPENSION BRIDGE
Where: Eastern Cape, South Africa
When: Built in 1969
Whoa: Just 7 meters above the surf
Any closer to the frothy mouth of the Storms River while moseying along its namesake 252-foot-long pedestrian suspension bridge and your toes will be coated in salt.
A highlight and literal low-point of Tsitsikamma National Park's famous Otter Trail along South Africa's Garden Route Coast, the 50-year-old Storms River Suspension Bridge hangs barely 20 feet above cold, current-infested Indian Ocean waters that keep this otherwise mild, pleasant bridge stroll just a little bit creepy.
For a louder scream, head to nearby Bloukrans Bridge just down the highway on the Western Cape -- home to the world's highest bungee jump.
 
 
9. Frighteningly seismically situated: OSMAN GAZI BRIDGE
Where: Gebze, Turkey
When: Opened in 2016
Whoa: Turkey's longest bridge crosses one of the world's most intense earthquake zones.
The crown of Turkey's O-5 motorway between Istanbul and Izmir, the Osman Gazi is one of the world's longest suspension bridges and currently the longest bridge in the country.
Stretching nearly 3 kilometers over the Gulf of Izmit (and a major earthquake zone), the six-lane bridge's steel pyloned concrete foundation rests on a massive gravel bed to cushion it from big tremblers, which is equally comforting and disconcerting.
Next up: Turkey's Cannakale 1915 Bridge, connecting Lapseki and Gelibolu (Gallipoli) across the Dardanelles, is expected to become the world's longest bridge when it opens in time for the country's 2023 centennial.
 
 
10. Frighteningly gephyrophobia triggering: MACKINAC BRIDGE
Where: Michigan, USA
When: Opened in 1957
Whoa: If you're too scared to cross this 5-mile bridge, someone else will do it for you.
Crossing the "Mighty Mac" between Michigan's Upper and Lower Peninsulas and two Great Lakes can fray driver nerves even when winds aren't exceeding 30 mph, which happens often enough on one of the world's longest bridges with a center suspension span that can shift 35 feet to either side in high crosswinds.
If that alone makes you want to turn around, the Mackinac Bridge Authority offers a free Drivers Assistance Program to get you across this bridge. In a given year, more than 1,000 drivers will take them up on it.
Some extra reassurance: 1998 marked the historic bridge's 100 millionth crossing. So you should be fine.
 
 
11. Frighteningly dicey: DANYOR SUSPENSION BRIDGE
Where: Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan
When: Built in the mid-1960s
Whoa: Most middle-aged, semi-retired bridges in the area look even scarier.
They don't build bridges in Northern Pakistan's Karakoram Highway country like they used to -- which is a very good thing.
Home to some of the diciest rope bridges biding their time over remote rushing mountain rivers, the area has endearingly nicknamed at least one of them Pul-e-Sirat: the "bridge between heaven and hell."
Dangling for 500 feet (but otherwise an eternity) between its namesake city and Gilgit-Baltistan, the Danyor Suspension Bridge earned its heaven-and-hell moniker the honest way: by serving its community for more than 50 years before being officially deemed unsafe for normal traffic by district officials.
Pedestrians and two-wheeled vehicles are still welcome.
 
 
12. Frighteningly back in business: OJUELA BRIDGE
Where: Mapimí, Mexico
When: Constructed in 1898
Whoa: Heavy loads of precious minerals crossed this abyss more than 100 years ago.
What else but late 19th-century gold fever could have led to the construction of this chillingly narrow, exposed metal span over a deep gorge in the northwestern Mexican desert?
One of the world's longest suspension bridges of its day, the 1,043-foot-long Ojuela Bridge was left to a slow rusty death after mining operations ceased in the 1930s, leaving a mineral-stripped ghost town to molder away on the far side.
Reopened in the 1990s, the restored bridge now welcomes off-the-beaten-path thrill seekers who can follow it up with a zipline ride if their adrenaline supply allows.
A hundred miles up the road is the area's other out-there tourist attraction: Zona del Silencio -- a mystically "silent" patch of desert in the neighboring Mapimi Biosphere Reserve.
As for the region's signature bridge, there's nothing silent about those vintage creaking noises.
 
13. Frighteningly jammed: HOWRAH BRIDGE (RABINDRA SETU)
Where: Kolkata, India
When: Opened in 1943
Whoa: Busiest bridge of its kind in the world
India's most humanity-choked cantilever bridge, designed with a central 1,500-foot suspension span, carries about 100,000 vehicles and up to a million pedestrians daily. And then there are the cows.
The iconic, three-tier, eight-lane "spine of steel" connecting Kolkata with Howrah over the Hooghly River has weathered unique challenges over 75 years of rampant use -- ranging from cargo vessel collisions to corrosion issues caused by excessive bird feces (hawks, crows, pigeons and bats have all claimed residence here, too) to, of course, overwhelming congestion.
More than half a century ago, the bridge was officially renamed "Rabindra Setu" in honor of India's first Poet Laureate, Rabindranath Tagore.
Word of this has yet to actually reach the Howrah Bridge masses, who are a little tied up right now.
 
 
14. Frighteningly finally happening: CHACAO CHANNEL BRIDGE
Where: Isla de Chiloé, Chile
When: Planned completion: 2020
Whoa: South America's longest suspension bridge
Proposals for a bridge linking the island of Chiloé to mainland Chile in the country's deep south have come and gone since the early 1970s. Until now.
Construction is underway on Latin America's longest bridge, a 2.75 kilometer, $740 million, multispan suspension bridge crossing a deep ocean channel buffeted by strong winds, fierce currents, a neighboring major fault zone -- and some contentious views.
Bridge supporters envision an economic boost for a remote, culturally distinct island tenuously connected to the rest of the country by ferry service. Opponents fear economic opportunism and a loss of cultural distinctness.
 
 

 

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Sidu River Bridge: This impressive span in Hubei, China, is the world's second highest bridge (to China's cable-stayed Duge Bridge) and the world's highest suspension bridge.

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Akashi Kaikyō Bridge: This engineering feat in Japan is built to withstand 178 mph winds, 8.5-magnitude earthquakes and hostile sea currents.

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Mackinac Bridge: The Mackinac Bridge in Michigan opened in 1957. The Mackinac Bridge Authority offers free assistance to drivers too afraid to drive across.

 

 

 

Royal Gorge Bridge: This span in Colorado is America's highest suspension bridge.

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Charles Kuonen Suspension Bridge: Located in Randa, Switzerland, the Charles Kuonen Suspension Bridge is the world's longest pedestrian suspension bridge.

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Cina made bridge.Scare.

 

 

Moreover I got height phobia.

 

I chicken out on this

You go to sg treetop walk suspension bridge, and if you still find high and scary then all the posted suspension bridge no need to step on it liao.  [laugh]

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Cina made bridge.Scare.

 

 

Moreover I got height phobia.

 

I chicken out on this

Give you this one ..... Ok ..... last time in Jurong Bird Park nong nong time back like @Radx time he like to play play there post-157298-0-54297000-1528470142.jpeg Edited by BanCoe
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I rather skydive than walk on such glass bridges.

 

I have fear of walking on edges of tall buildings.

 

People asked my but why you not afraid of flying?

 

"Hello flying is seated all buckled-up

Very different from walking....."

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I rather skydive than walk on such glass bridges.

 

I have fear of walking on edges of tall buildings.

 

People asked my but why you not afraid of flying?

 

"Hello flying is seated all buckled-up

Very different from walking....."

But walking on bridges you also got protected by the railing and fences le. Actually it is the fear in us that stop us from walking on such bridges even though it should be safe.

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But walking on bridges you also got protected by the railing and fences le. Actually it is the fear in us that stop us from walking on such bridges even though it should be safe.

It's the swaying of the bridge that's scary
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I more scared in climbing high flight of stairs with narrow steps like in great wall lol

Climbing high flight of stairs is more dangerous cause if you missed one step, you might ended up roll down the stairs.

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