Kaiyuan Changhong Bridge
The Kaiyuan Changhong Bridge, a stone arch structure spanning the Nanpanjiang River east of Tianfang Village Group in Kaiyuan City, Honghe Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China, is situated along the former National Highway 326. Constructed in 1961, it is designated as a national-level protected bridge and included in Major cultural heritage sites under national-level protection.
History
The earliest bridge on the Nanpan River in Kaiyuan City, the Nanpan River Suspension Bridge, also referred to as the Iron Cord Bridge, was constructed during the twenty-fourth year of the Guangxu era of the Qing dynasty. It was financed by the Yunnan merchant Wang Chi, who donated silver for its construction. In 1927, the bridge was destroyed by bandits. In 1944, during the Second Sino-Japanese War, the Iron Cord Bridge was utilized for distributing ammunition. This bridge was constructed on the site of a previous flexible steel cable suspension bridge, featuring a span of 63.4 meters and a load capacity of 10 tons. In 1949, the Kuomintang army detonated and destroyed the suspension bridge to obstruct the advance of PLA, which was subsequently reconstructed the following year. During the 1950s and 1960s, Kaiyuan evolved as an industrial town in Yunnan, but the iron rope bridge failed to accommodate the increasing traffic demands.A new single-span stone arch bridge, over 100 meters in length, is to be constructed around 2 kilometers north of the old cable bridge. Construction commenced in March 1960, with an anticipated completion date in September of the same year, coinciding with the National Day celebration. At 4:45 p.m. on September 25, 1960, the arch under construction fell from south to north as a result of a storm. The accident postponed the building timeline by one year, and in September 1961, the bridge was formally inaugurated for traffic. The workers, during the construction of the bridge, used the phrase "overcome the difficulties and offer a long rainbow." Due to the bridge's grandeur and its resemblance to a rainbow soaring over the river, it was christened "Changhong Bridge", which means "long rainbow" in Chinese. Upon its completion, the Changhong Bridge was the biggest single-hole stone arch bridge in China, and the Chinese bridge specialist Mao Yisheng asserted that it was the longest single-arch stone bridge globally at that time.