The Western Journal

Stunning Footage: Massive Chinese Bridge Collapses Months After Opening

A recently opened Chinese bridge, the 2,487-foot-long Hongqi Bridge in southwest China, collapsed just months after completion. The bridge, designed to connect Sichuan province with Tibet, was closed a day before the collapse after authorities detected cracks in the ground, prompting an emergency response. Fortunately, no injuries were reported as vehicles were removed prior to the failure. The collapse occured amid a landslide, sending dust and debris into the air.

This incident follows other recent bridge disasters in China, including a fatal railway bridge collapse in Qinghai province in August 2025 that killed 12 workers, and another deadly collapse in July 2024. The repeated failures have raised concerns about construction standards, especially in China’s western regions, which frequently enough face unstable geological conditions and seismic activity. Experts and reports have also questioned the impact of China’s recent reduction in large-scale infrastructure investments on project quality and safety. Authorities typically attribute such disasters to natural causes, but safety observers call for greater attention to construction risks in earthquake-prone areas.


A massive Chinese bridge that had only been open for a few months collapsed this week

Authorities said the 2,487-foot-long Hongqi Bridge in southwest China, which was built to connect Sichuan province with Tibet, had been closed to traffic a day earlier, according to NBC News.

On Monday, local officials noted cracks in the ground, triggering an emergency response,  according to Newsweek.

Vehicles that were on the bridge were removed, and it was blocked off to traffic.

The collapse took place on Tuesday, spewing dust and dirt high into the air as it tumbled amid a landslide.

No injuries were reported in the collapse.

The Hongqi Bridge failure comes weeks after another major Chinese bridge disaster.

In August, 12 workers were killed and four others were listed as missing after a railway bridge in Qinghai province collapsed while it was under construction.

In July 2024, at least 11 people died in a bridge collapse, NBC noted.

The most recent collapse “raised concerns about long-term construction standards, particularly in China’s western provinces, where major transportation projects often traverse unstable terrain,” Newsweek wrote.


The site said “China’s retreat from large-scale infrastructure investment” is leading to questions about quality.

“Once known for pouring trillions of dollars into roads, railways, and airports to fuel growth, Beijing has recently faced scrutiny over declining quality control and the construction of projects in geologically unstable regions,” Newsweek reported.

Chinese authorities generally ascribe infrastructure disasters to natural causes.

However, safety experts question whether enough attention is paid to risks in areas of seismic activity.

As noted by NBC, the region where the most recent collapse took place, Sichuan, is a very active region for earthquakes.




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