rott
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Lmao....If it saves blasting less mountains the better unless it's to blast mountains to draw monsoon rain to xinjiang and dry up northern Hindustan
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Lmao....If it saves blasting less mountains the better unless it's to blast mountains to draw monsoon rain to xinjiang and dry up northern Hindustan
Lol wut? There are many rail above road bridges in the world.
The CPC worker clearly didn't do his homework before spewing his propaganda.
Sow the pictures
will be world's first rail-road combined bridge with railway line on top deck,
Germany isn't highest in the world. And it's not HSR.
It took me a whole 30 seconds to find a rail over road video. They obviously did zero research (geez what a shocker! )
Well...nice but it has nothing to do with the OP claim in the title.Germany isn't highest in the world. And it's not HSR.
China's is highest in the world and for HSR.
Highest in the world....Well...nice but it has nothing to do with the OP claim in the title.
BTW that bridge was built in 1877. Not exactly a new engineering feat by China.
Well...nice but it has nothing to do with the OP claim in the title.
BTW that bridge was built in 1877. So not exactly a new engineering feat by China.
Here's another in New Zealand.
View attachment 407751
Special features of the bridge which have made it to claim the "first" in the world like:
"The Jinshajiang Bridge, which will have a four-lane railway and a six-lane highway, is 1874.9 meters long, with a 336-meter-wide span on its main arch. The railway track will run 32 meters above the highway, the highest in the world.
A rail-road combined bridge usually has road on top. However, a road in Yibin will connect with the highway so the bridge faced height restriction. Also, considering the mountainous terrain in the area, building rail track on top meant less tunnels."
Albeit the title was a tad misleading but the highlighted parts have fufilled sufficiently the claim if the author could have made those in a clearer statement.
Congrats!
Well...nice but it has nothing to do with the OP claim in the title.
BTW that bridge was built in 1877. So not exactly a new engineering feat by China.
Here's another in New Zealand.
View attachment 407751