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‘Avatar’ mountains world’s highest glass-bottomed bridge to open
The Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge, the tallest and longest pedestrian bridge in the world set to be opened in Hunan Province in China, October 2015. AFP-Relaxnews supplied

ZHANGJIAJIE CITY, Hunan Province, China, May 22 — China is set to become home to the tallest, longest and, arguably, scariest pedestrian bridge in the world, when construction of a glass-bottomed bridge is completed in the national park that inspired the floating mountains from the James Cameron film “Avatar”.

Hovering a dizzying 300 metres (984 feet) above the ground, the Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge will span 380 metres (1,247 feet) in length and 6 metres (20 feet) wide.

Designed by Tel Aviv-based architectural firm Haim Dotan Ltd., the bridge can accommodate up to 800 people and will feature the world’s highest bungee jump. Designers also envision the bridge as a dramatic catwalk for fashion shows.

Lead architect Haim Dotan said the design — glass-bottomed floor, side suspension cables — is meant to work seamlessly with nature, make the least impact on its surroundings and give visitors the sense of floating in mid-air.

“...the Zhangjiajie Glass Bridge was designed to be as invisible as possible,” he said in a statement.

“A white bridge disappearing into the clouds.”

Director James Cameron is said to have been inspired by Zhangjiajie National Park’s dramatic sandstone pillars to create the floating mountains that characterised Pandora in his 2009 film “Avatar”.

Zhangjiajie National Park is located in the northern part of Hunan province.

One of the columns has also been renamed the Hallelujah Mountain after the film.

Construction of the bridge will be completed in July and the official opening is set for October. — AFP-Relaxnews

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