Rumichaca Bridge
The Rumichaca Bridge is the principal highway passage between Colombia and Ecuador. The bridge is located from the city of Ipiales, Colombia and from the city of Tulcán, Ecuador. The bridge is located in the Andes at an elevation of. The Pan-American Highway crosses the bridge.
Rumichaca received its name because here a natural stone bridge crosses the Carchi River. The stone bridge is often called the "Inca Bridge." The Carchi River was called the Angasmayo by the Incas and early Spanish colonists. The bridge, according to Spanish chroniclers, was the northernmost outpost of the Inca Empire, wrested from the Pasto people in the early 16th century. Atop this natural bridge are the old Colombian and Ecuadorian customs houses. Prior to the completion of the modern bridge in 1973, the stone bridge was used as a border crossing for goods and people.
The modern bridge
The modern bridge, with a span of, is upstream from the stone bridge, The bridge is the most important artery for commerce and the transport of goods between Colombia and Ecuador. In 2013, 57.9 percent of Colombia's exports to Ecuador crossed the border on the Rumichaca Bridge. In the same year, 77 percent of Ecuador's exports to Colombia crossed the Rumichaca bridge.
From May 2017 until July 2019 nearly 1.7 million Venezuelans entered Ecuador, most of them across the Rumichaca Bridge. The Venezuelan refugees and migrants were fleeing hunger and hyperinflation occurring in their country. Four hundred thousand remained in Ecuador and the others continued on to Peru, Chile, and Argentina.