Tsing Ma Bridge
Every
year many millions of people use the Tsing Ma Bridge without actually getting a
close-up view of this modern-day engineering accomplishment of breathtaking
skill -- the world's longest suspension bridge carrying road and rail traffic.
The explanation is that the Airport Express, which whisks them across the bridge
in either direction, travels through one of two rail tunnels slung beneath the
six-lane roadway. All are passengers who have either just arrived at Hong Kong's
ultra-modern new International Airport at Chek Lap Kok, or are hurrying there to
catch their return flights.
Happily, however, most of them see this superb example of bridge-building genius
at least from a distance during their stay in Hong Kong. The newest and greatest
engineering marvel of this dynamic mega city, it is now Hong Kong's proud new
landmark, massively imposing by day, and a twinkling fairyland of lighted
lacework by night.
Meanwhile,
those bridge-concealing tunnels are there for good reason. If a particularly
severe typhoon struck Hong Kong and the bridge had to be closed to road traffic,
the trains would still be able to get through in either direction with
passengers and their luggage.
Planning for a new airport operating 24 hours a day began in the 90s when it was
obvious that the former Kai Tak Airport in urban Kowloon, limited by noise
restrictions, could never cope with ever-increasing air traffic.
But it was vital for the planned new airport off the northern coast of Lantau
Island to be linked with downtown Kowloon and Hong Kong Island by high-speed
road and rail connections.
The key to accomplish this was the Tsing Ma
Bridge which leapfrogs the islands of Tsing Yi and Ma Wan, linking up with a
lesser bridge in one direction and a tunnel beneath a housing estate in the
other.
A viewing platform north of the
bridge on Tsing Yi provides excellent views of this and two adjoining bridges.
Take the MTR to Tsing Yi and get a taxi. Note: All airport buses cross Tsing Ma
and Kap Shui Mun bridges. There is also green minibus 309M running between the
Tsing Yi Airport Railway station and the Lantau Link Visitors' Centre every
Saturday, Sunday and on public holidays. The service departs the Tsing Yi
station from 9:30am to 5pm and from the Visitor's Link from 10am to 6:30pm. The
minibuses run every 60 minutes and cost HK$7 for a single journey ticket.