ARTS / CULTURE & LEISURE
Bridges attract tourists to China’s mountainous province of Guizhou
Published: Oct 18, 2021 05:38 PM
The Beipanjiang Bridge in Southwest China's Guizhou Province, equivalent to the height of a 200-story building, has attracted large numbers of visitors from home and abroad.

"This bridge is very distinctive. The scenery below is primeval, and this is a good place to relax," said Wang Song, a tourist from the provincial capital Guiyang.

Sitting over 565 meters above a valley, the Beipanjiang Bridge is part of a highway linking Hangzhou in East China's Zhejiang Province and Ruili in the neighboring Yunnan Province. It is the world's highest bridge according to the Guinness World Records.

Guizhou has 50 of the 100 tallest bridges in the world. Due to the large number of bridges, their types and complex technologies used in the construction of the bridges, the province is known as "the museum of world bridges," according to the provincial department of transport.

In recent years, many bridges in Guizhou have turned out to be popular tourist attractions owing to stunning scenery around them.

Ma Xuanjun, a 40-year-old farmer living near the Beipanjiang Bridge, turned his newly built brick house into a rural inn in 2019.

"The bridge has attracted tourists from home and abroad, and I will do my best to make them happy and remember my hometown," Ma said.

Not far from the iconic Huangguoshu Waterfall in Guizhou, the 370-meter-high Baling River Bridge, one of the world's highest bridges, has drawn many skydivers since 2012. A bridge technology museum, recreational vehicle campgrounds and homestays have been built nearby.

Situated in the rolling mountains and hills, poor transportation had long hampered social and economic development in the province.

The province, with 92.5 percent of its area covered by mountains and hills, has built over 20,000 bridges since the late 1970s. Thanks to the construction of these bridges, Guizhou is becoming deeply integrated with the nation's transportation network, ushering in improved quality of life for local residents.

In the first half of 2021, the province received a total of 327 million tourists and raked in tourism revenue of 311.27 billion yuan ($48.37 billion), an increase of 89.7 percent and 118.59 percent year on year, respectively.

Guizhou will cultivate special tourism brands featuring bridges, summer resorts, hot springs and intangible cultural heritages, and constantly develop new business forms to meet market demand, said Li Fang, deputy head of the provincial department of culture and tourism.

"In this way, tourists would like to stay here longer and come again in the future," Li added.