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China Expressways, Highways: News & Discussions

Gyirong Pass highway takes new look after years of renovation in SW China's Tibet
Source: Xinhua| 2018-08-13 22:02:43|Editor: Li Xia


Aerial photo taken on Aug. 12, 2018 shows a winding mountain road of the Gyirong Pass highway in Gyirong County of Xigaze City, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region. The Gyirong Pass highway, a 94-kilometer section of the National Highway 216, is an important trade route connecting China and Nepal. The road was heavily affected by the devastating earthquake in Nepal in April 2015. Now the road has resumed vitality and taken a new look after years of repairing and renovation, while annual trade volume of Gyirong Port almost grew seven-fold from the post-quake period to top 2.8 billion yuan (414 million U.S. dollars) in 2017. (Xinhua/Liu Dongjun)

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China adds 8,130 km of expressways to toll road network in 2017
Source: Xinhua| 2018-08-25 21:26:22|Editor: Liangyu


BEIJING, Aug. 25 (Xinhua) -- China added 8,130 km of expressways to its toll road network last year, an increase of 6.5 percent year on year, according to the Ministry of Transport.

The newly-added expressways put the country's total length of fee-collecting expressway at 132,638 km, or 81 percent of the toll roads in China, data from the ministry showed.

In 2017, 15,245 km of first- and second-class toll roads became toll-free, marking a decline of 33.5 percent year on year, according to the ministry.

The country's toll roads registered a deficit of 402.6 billion yuan (about 58.4 billion U.S. dollars) last year, down 2.8 percent year on year.

China is aiming to build and put 5,000 km of expressways into use this year.

The country categorizes its roads into five tiers in terms of traffic volume, with expressway being the top class, followed by first-class, second-class, third-class and fourth-class roads.
 
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China's strongest earthquake-resistant bridge to be completed this year
2018-09-14 15:58:07 Ecns.cn Editor :Mo Hong'e

A view of the Puqian Bridge under construction in South China's Hainan Province, Sept. 14, 2018. Construction of the cross-sea bridge, scheduled for completion at the end of 2018, will cut the trip from Wenchang City to Haikou City from 90 minutes to about 20 minutes. Spanning a geological fault line, it’s being built to the highest standard of earthquake resistance at an investment of 3.01 billion yuan ($440 million). The 5.6-km-long bridge is expected to promote economic growth in the northern part of Hainan Province. (Photo: China News Service/Luo Yunfei)


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World's highest bridge opens in Southwest China
Reporter: Liu Yang 丨 CCTV.com
12-29-2016 12:47 BJT

Guizhou province in southwest China is already home to seven of the 10 highest bridges in the country. And the Beipanjiang Bidge, now the world’s highest, has just opened to traffic. Clearly with a good head for heights, CCTV's Liu Yang visited this latest example of how Chinese engineering now ranks among the best in the world.

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The Beipanjiang Bidge, now the world’s highest, has just opened to traffic.

Another architectural marvel to add to the country which already has more than its fair share of construction wonders. Situated in rugged mountains and gorges, the 1,341-meter-long structure, soars 565 meters above the Baipanjiang Valley.

Equivalent to a 200-storey building, Beipanjiang has just overtaken the Sidu River Bridge in Hubei province to become the world's highest.

China has completed many noteworthy feats of engineering in recent years. Now another milestone has been passed in the field of bridge construction. Walking on the bridge above the gorge, one appreciates what cutting-edge technology has made possible.

The bridge connects the mountainous provinces of Guizhou and Yunnan. It’s expected to shorten the travel time between the two places to an hour and a half from five hours in the past.

The bridge, which spans the Beipanjiang Valley, is part of an extensive highway linking Hangzhou City in eastern China's Zhejiang province to Ruili City in southwestern Yunnan province. Construction of the massive suspension bridge began in 2013, at a cost of around 1 billion yuan or 143 million US dollars.

"In October 2013, the Ministry of Transport approved the Beipanjiang Bridge and gave us 8 point 9 million yuan in scientific research funding," said Zhou Ping, Director of the Beipanjiang Project.

"Our project provided match-funding of around 6 point 1 million yuan, bringing the research fund to around 15 million. Many institutes, including Jiaotong University, Guizhou Highway engineering group, and the Guizhou office of transportation joined together to conduct research and development. We developed a new kind of technology called cantilever erection by longitudinal launching, and this significantly shortened construction time."

Experts say construction was affected by wind, requiring a high degree of precision. Normally, crews transport pre-assembled sections and install them on the bridge. But on this project parts were assembled on-site. The engineering side also presented many challenges.

"Where to place the bridge piers was a problem. The gorge here is over 500 meters deep, so how are we going to design the structure of the bridge to deal with the strong wind field problem?'' said Liu Bo, deputy chief engineer, CCCC Highway Consultants Co., LTD..

Despite these challenges, the bridge is now part of the highway network in Guizhou, integrated into the regional grid in southwest China which includes the provinces of Sichuan and Yunnan as well as Chongqing municipality. The increased traffic flow through this region thanks to the Beipanjian Bridge is expected to boost logistics and attract new investment.

Bridge in SW China wins Guinness World Record for world’s highest bridge
(People's Daily Online) 16:01, September 20, 2018

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The Beipanjiang First Bridge

“The highest bridge is Beipanjiang First Bridge, at 565.4 meters above the mean high water level,” says the certificate issued by Guinness World Records, to the bridge located over a “U” shape canyon at the junction of southwest China’s Yunnan Province and Guizhou Province, a local Guizhou media source reported on Wednesday.

As the world’s highest bridge and the bridge with the second largest span in the world so far, the Beipanjiang Bridge is a steel truss cable-stayed bridge with a total length of 1,341.4 meters and a maximum span of 720 meters.

The bridge, with a height equal to a 200-storey building, is one of three bridges on the Bijie-Duge section of the Hangzhou-Ruili Expressway, an expressway that connects the cities of Hangzhou in east China’s Zhejiang Province, and Ruili, Dehong Autonomous Prefecture of southwest China’s Yunnan Province.

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Photo shows the Guinness World Records certificate that confirms Beipanjiang First Bridge as the world’s highest bridge.

As it was built over a steep canyon with complicated geological conditions, it’s said that the bridge created the need for brand new construction technology and building methods.

The company that constructed the bridge also allegedly completed a research project for China’s Ministry of Transport while building the bridge. Additionally, they gained a series of honors for the construction project, including four patents for the invention of world leading new technologies, seven patents for new utility models, a Gustav Lindenthal Gold Medal, regarded as the world’s Nobel Prize in the bridge field, and the highest Science and Technology Award from the China Highway & Transportation Society.
 
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Bridge in SW China wins Guinness World Record for world’s highest bridge
(People's Daily Online) 16:01, September 20, 2018

FOREIGN201809201602000021385351713.jpg

The Beipanjiang First Bridge

“The highest bridge is Beipanjiang First Bridge, at 565.4 meters above the mean high water level,” says the certificate issued by Guinness World Records, to the bridge located over a “U” shape canyon at the junction of southwest China’s Yunnan Province and Guizhou Province, a local Guizhou media source reported on Wednesday.

As the world’s highest bridge and the bridge with the second largest span in the world so far, the Beipanjiang Bridge is a steel truss cable-stayed bridge with a total length of 1,341.4 meters and a maximum span of 720 meters.

The bridge, with a height equal to a 200-storey building, is one of three bridges on the Bijie-Duge section of the Hangzhou-Ruili Expressway, an expressway that connects the cities of Hangzhou in east China’s Zhejiang Province, and Ruili, Dehong Autonomous Prefecture of southwest China’s Yunnan Province.

FOREIGN201809201602000144142605075.jpg

Photo shows the Guinness World Records certificate that confirms Beipanjiang First Bridge as the world’s highest bridge.

As it was built over a steep canyon with complicated geological conditions, it’s said that the bridge created the need for brand new construction technology and building methods.

The company that constructed the bridge also allegedly completed a research project for China’s Ministry of Transport while building the bridge. Additionally, they gained a series of honors for the construction project, including four patents for the invention of world leading new technologies, seven patents for new utility models, a Gustav Lindenthal Gold Medal, regarded as the world’s Nobel Prize in the bridge field, and the highest Science and Technology Award from the China Highway & Transportation Society.

Guizhou is one of China's poorest regions but, recently, big data and IoT industries are taking hold there.

Good governmental policies and state guidance are very important.
 
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Engineering milestone! Another mega bridge finishes closure in South China
New China TV
Published on Oct 6, 2018

A 1,155-m-long bridge has recently completed closure in south China's Guangxi. With a lifting weight equivalent to 1,100 adult elephants at the same time, it's the heaviest lifting project in the world to date.

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The middle arch is lifted in May.

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Largest extradosed cable-based bridge in north China put in place
CGTN
Published on Oct 16, 2018

The two sections of the largest extradosed cable-stayed bridge in north China were finally put in place on Tuesday in Xingtai City, north China's Hebei Province. Construction of the bridge began in May last year, and the whole overpass will be put into use by the end of this year.
 
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Largest extradosed cable-based bridge in north China put in place
CGTN
Published on Oct 16, 2018

The two sections of the largest extradosed cable-stayed bridge in north China were finally put in place on Tuesday in Xingtai City, north China's Hebei Province. Construction of the bridge began in May last year, and the whole overpass will be put into use by the end of this year.
End of this year, more than 140,000 km in total length?
I think by the end of 2017, the total length of expressways has already surpassed US+Canada+Germany combined.
 
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World’s longest suspension bridge reaches milestone in Southwest China
By Deng Xiaoci Source:Global Times Published: 2018/10/18 23:13:40

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Cranes operate 480 meters above the Jinsha River at the construction site of the Jin'an Jinshajiang Bridge on Thursday. Photo: Deng Xiaoci/ GT
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Construction workers work on the top of the bridge tower. Photo: Deng Xiaoci/GT
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The 228-meter-tall main tower of the Jin'an Jinshajiang bridge is capped on Thursday. Photo: Deng Xiaoci/GT

Construction on the world's longest suspension bridge over a canyon being built in Southwest Yunnan Province passed a major milestone on Thursday with the capping of a 228-meter-tall tower, which at its peak stands almost half a kilometer above the Jinsha River.

"The capping of the main tower means construction is 40 percent finished, and we are ahead of schedule," Wen Dongwei, the construction team's Communist Party of China branch secretary, told the Global Times.

Work on the tower on the east bank of the Jinsha River was completed by capping it with cement. The top of the tower stands 480 meters above the river.

Construction of the Jin'an Jinshajiang Bridge near the city of Lijiang began in April 2017. It is being built by the Second Highway Engineering Co, a subsidiary of the Xi'an-based China Communications Construction Company.

The bridge will span 1,386 meters and is expected to be open to traffic by June 2020, said Wen.

The bridge will significantly reduce travel times between cities in Yunnan and Sichuan provinces. The current six-hour dive between the ancient city of Lijiang in Yunnan to the city of Panzhihua in Sichuan will be cut to just two hours.

According to a statement the company sent to the Global Times on Thursday, the bridge will also serve a bridgehead role for China to connect to the ASEAN, as well as a key project in the Belt and Road initiative.
 
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Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge: A megaproject full of Chinese wisdom
By Gao Yun
2018-10-22 19:25 GMT+8

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"The construction scale and difficulty of the HZMB is the biggest, compared to other existing cross-sea bridge-tunnel transportation cluster projects," said Su Quanke, chief engineer of the HZMB Authority.

With the devotion of over 200 R&D institutions and thousands of sci-tech personnel, the project has been granted over 1,000 patents, pushing the boundaries of possibility over and over again.

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China's Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge will open to traffic. /VCG Photo

Bridge, island and tunnel, all integral

The world's longest sea-based project comprises four parts, including a 22.9-kilometer steel bridge, two artificial islands, a submerged sea tunnel extending for 6.7 kilometers at a depth of 40 meters, as well as leading bridges that connect the bridge to the cities.

For a bridge project, designers prefer to build all the structure on the ground, and only opt to tunnel when there is no alternative.

However, for the HZMB, the most feasible design is to integrate bridge, island and tunnel to form a complete cross-sea channel.

"The Pearl River Estuary holds a world-level shipping channel where around 5,000 vessels get through at its busiest time of the day. Smooth traffic should be guaranteed. And the location is near the Hong Kong International Airport. With about 2,000 flights taking off and landing at the airport, the bridge cannot be built too high for safety reasons," said Meng Fanchao, chief designer of the HZMB project. "But you cannot have a submerged sea tunnel without any support. That forced us to build the artificial islands."

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Bridge, island and tunnel are all indispensable to the HZMB project. /VCG Photo

Chinese engineers blazed a trail in installing deep-immersed tunnel tubes. "There is no model for us to refer to as all the cases are shallow-buried tubes," said Su.

"Due to lack of experience, the installation of the first tube lasted for 96 hours, and we did not take a rest for four days and five nights," said Yin Haiqing, deputy manager of the Project Management Department for Island and Tunnel. "Everyone was exhausted when we made it."

The 6.7-kilometer tunnel is the world's longest submerged sea tunnel.

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The construction of the west artificial island of the HZMB project. /VCG Photo

Two artificial islands, covering an area of 200,000 square meters, help create a smooth transition between bridge sections and tunnels.

Different from traditional island reclaimed from the sea, the engineers "put 120 steel cylinders with 22-meter diameter into the seabed, make out the shape of an island, and fill the island with soil," Su said, introducing the innovative way they adopted to build the artificial island, saying it was firmer, more efficient and friendly to the marine ecology.

Building blocks

The HZMB is formed of box girders, amounting to 420,000 tons of steel – roughly the weight of 60 Eiffel Towers or 10 Beijing National Stadiums (the Bird's Nest).

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The HZMB is formed of box girders, amounting to 420,000 tons of steel, roughly the weight of 60 Eiffel Towers. /VCG Photo

Many of the steel components, such as the piers, pylons and immersed tubes, were made by China's large self-developed equipment, and then shipped to the construction site. Assembling the precast components is just like building blocks, but with much more difficulty.

The constructors even spun a steel pylon with a height of 160 meters and a weight of over 3,000 tons at 90 degrees above the sea, an unprecedented practice in the history of the world's bridge construction.

"Such an integrated design would not have been possible if the country's overall research capability and equipment level had not advanced to the current level," said Su.

The bridge also made a first in China to use robot welding. "The multi-head welding avoids uneven thermal distribution, eliminating internal stress caused by the welding process," said Chai Rui, deputy chief engineer of the HZMB Authority.

Longer lifespan, safer design

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The bridge has a lifespan of 120 years. /VCG Photo

The designers made another breakthrough in the lifespan of the bridge. Bridges in China are usually designed to serve for no longer than 100 years, and the sea environment will largely shorten the lifespan of architectures due to high humidity and salinity.

To address the problem, the designers used new materials and new technologies like concrete reinforcement and rust resistance.

They also applied fire prevention and accident rescue facilities for the bridge. The designers built an experiment platform for the submerged sea tunnel to conduct combustion tests of vehicles. Three years of experiments show that the fireproof facility can ensure that the immersed tubes won't be destroyed for two hours under 1,200 degrees Celsius.

The artificial island also has a marine rescue platform, which will send a rescue team within three minutes to the tunnel and five to seven minutes to the bridge if an accident happens.

"The megaproject is also the best place for the application of China's latest technologies," said Su. "We hope more large projects can play their roles in leading the transformation and upgrading of China's manufacturing."

(Top image: China's Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge. /VCG Photo)
 
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Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge: A megaproject full of Chinese wisdom
By Gao Yun
2018-10-22 19:25 GMT+8

3160d23ecf3844f4aa58491f22a5419c.jpg

"The construction scale and difficulty of the HZMB is the biggest, compared to other existing cross-sea bridge-tunnel transportation cluster projects," said Su Quanke, chief engineer of the HZMB Authority.

With the devotion of over 200 R&D institutions and thousands of sci-tech personnel, the project has been granted over 1,000 patents, pushing the boundaries of possibility over and over again.

09ab06bcba2e425b95f9dfb69cf90c79.jpg
China's Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge will open to traffic. /VCG Photo

Bridge, island and tunnel, all integral

The world's longest sea-based project comprises four parts, including a 22.9-kilometer steel bridge, two artificial islands, a submerged sea tunnel extending for 6.7 kilometers at a depth of 40 meters, as well as leading bridges that connect the bridge to the cities.

For a bridge project, designers prefer to build all the structure on the ground, and only opt to tunnel when there is no alternative.

However, for the HZMB, the most feasible design is to integrate bridge, island and tunnel to form a complete cross-sea channel.

"The Pearl River Estuary holds a world-level shipping channel where around 5,000 vessels get through at its busiest time of the day. Smooth traffic should be guaranteed. And the location is near the Hong Kong International Airport. With about 2,000 flights taking off and landing at the airport, the bridge cannot be built too high for safety reasons," said Meng Fanchao, chief designer of the HZMB project. "But you cannot have a submerged sea tunnel without any support. That forced us to build the artificial islands."

1d43ce09f80249fb885d32778f6c557a.jpg
Bridge, island and tunnel are all indispensable to the HZMB project. /VCG Photo

Chinese engineers blazed a trail in installing deep-immersed tunnel tubes. "There is no model for us to refer to as all the cases are shallow-buried tubes," said Su.

"Due to lack of experience, the installation of the first tube lasted for 96 hours, and we did not take a rest for four days and five nights," said Yin Haiqing, deputy manager of the Project Management Department for Island and Tunnel. "Everyone was exhausted when we made it."

The 6.7-kilometer tunnel is the world's longest submerged sea tunnel.

d5a0471ab32d48a8bb9f5415940b2476.jpg
The construction of the west artificial island of the HZMB project. /VCG Photo

Two artificial islands, covering an area of 200,000 square meters, help create a smooth transition between bridge sections and tunnels.

Different from traditional island reclaimed from the sea, the engineers "put 120 steel cylinders with 22-meter diameter into the seabed, make out the shape of an island, and fill the island with soil," Su said, introducing the innovative way they adopted to build the artificial island, saying it was firmer, more efficient and friendly to the marine ecology.

Building blocks

The HZMB is formed of box girders, amounting to 420,000 tons of steel – roughly the weight of 60 Eiffel Towers or 10 Beijing National Stadiums (the Bird's Nest).

e7374c2f6c4d4193a8abb3f040f08f92.jpg
The HZMB is formed of box girders, amounting to 420,000 tons of steel, roughly the weight of 60 Eiffel Towers. /VCG Photo

Many of the steel components, such as the piers, pylons and immersed tubes, were made by China's large self-developed equipment, and then shipped to the construction site. Assembling the precast components is just like building blocks, but with much more difficulty.

The constructors even spun a steel pylon with a height of 160 meters and a weight of over 3,000 tons at 90 degrees above the sea, an unprecedented practice in the history of the world's bridge construction.

"Such an integrated design would not have been possible if the country's overall research capability and equipment level had not advanced to the current level," said Su.

The bridge also made a first in China to use robot welding. "The multi-head welding avoids uneven thermal distribution, eliminating internal stress caused by the welding process," said Chai Rui, deputy chief engineer of the HZMB Authority.

Longer lifespan, safer design

c249f66e21cf47bfa5d85daeda4a556e.jpg
The bridge has a lifespan of 120 years. /VCG Photo

The designers made another breakthrough in the lifespan of the bridge. Bridges in China are usually designed to serve for no longer than 100 years, and the sea environment will largely shorten the lifespan of architectures due to high humidity and salinity.

To address the problem, the designers used new materials and new technologies like concrete reinforcement and rust resistance.

They also applied fire prevention and accident rescue facilities for the bridge. The designers built an experiment platform for the submerged sea tunnel to conduct combustion tests of vehicles. Three years of experiments show that the fireproof facility can ensure that the immersed tubes won't be destroyed for two hours under 1,200 degrees Celsius.

The artificial island also has a marine rescue platform, which will send a rescue team within three minutes to the tunnel and five to seven minutes to the bridge if an accident happens.

"The megaproject is also the best place for the application of China's latest technologies," said Su. "We hope more large projects can play their roles in leading the transformation and upgrading of China's manufacturing."

(Top image: China's Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge. /VCG Photo)
Finally!
 
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Amazing, congrats and I hope you people will bring such tech and beauty to Pakistan as well.
 
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