When you first see photographs of the Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge the reactions tend to split: a slack-jawed “how?” and a reflexive urge to step closer. The new suspension crossing, opened to traffic on September 28, 2025, hangs a full 625 metres (about 2,050 feet) above the churning Beipan River below and stretches nearly 2,890 metres from cliff to cliff — enough to reclaim the title of the world’s highest bridge. Those raw numbers are what make the structure headline news, but the human story — of travel shortened, an isolated landscape remade, and a place turned into an adrenaline magnet — is what makes it a feature.
News
Inside China’s New Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge — The World’s Tallest And Most Thrilling Crossing
China’s Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge soars 625 m above the Beipan River, cutting a two-hour canyon slog to minutes. Part engineering statement, part adventure park, the nearly 2.9 km suspension bridge is already remaking travel and tourism in Guizhou

China’s New Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge Photo: Glabb/Wikimedia Commons
China’s New Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge Photo: Glabb/Wikimedia Commons
CLOSE
