At 26.4 miles long, the Qingdao Haiwan Bridge would easily cross the English Channel and is almost three miles longer than the previous record-holder, the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway in the American state of Louisiana.
Built in just four years at a cost of £5.5 billion, the six lane road bridge is supported by more than 5 200 columns and was designed by the Shandong Gausu Group. A staggering 450 000 tons of steel was used in its construction (enough for almost 65 Eiffel Towers) and 2.3 million cubic metres of concrete, equivalent to filling 3 800 Olympic-sized swimming pools. At least 10 000 workers around the clock to build the bridge, which was constructed from opposite ends and connected in the middle in the last few days of the project.
When it opens to traffic later this year, the bridge is expected to carry over 30 000 cars a day and will cut the commute between the city of Qingdao and the sprawling suburb of Huangdao by between 20 and 30 minutes.
Utterly awesome.
China is also home to seven of the world's 10 longest bridges, including the world's lengthiest, the 102 mile Danyang-Kunshan rail bridge, which runs over land and water near Shanghai. And with Beijing pumping billions into boosting China's infrastructure, the Qingdao Haiwan Bridge will not be the world's longest sea bridge for very long. In December 2009, work started on a 31 mile bridge that will link Zhuhai in southern Guangdong Province, China's manufacturing heartland, with the financial centre of Hong Kong. The £6.5 billion project is expected to be completed in 2016.
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