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I paid $22 to walk across the famous glass bridge that spans China's 'Grand Canyon,' and it was the worst experience I had in a year of traveling the world for work

Harrison Jacobs/Business Insider

  • I left New York a year ago to travel around the world as Business Insider's international correspondent . While I've had some epic adventures, some bucket-list attractions were overpriced, uninspiring, overcrowded, or just plain boring.
  • The worst offender was the Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge in China , the longest and highest glass bridge in the world.
  • While the scenery was beautiful, the site was overrun with tourists, the tickets were overpriced, the glass was so scuffed it was hard to see to the floor below, and it was hard to see any point to the visit except for taking a selfie.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
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When I left to travel as Business Insider's international correspondent a year ago, I knew there would be amazing adventures along the way. I also knew there would be more than a few duds.

The worst offender of the bunch was my visit the Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge in Hunan, China. Opened in 2016 and considered the tallest and longest glass bridge in the world, the bridge inspired viral video after viral video of terrified tourists crawling over a futuristic glass bridge spanning a verdant gorge.

After seeing a few too many of the videos, I decided I had to check it out during my six weeks in China. It was a textbook lesson in the difference between the internet and reality.

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Though the viral videos and selfies of people on the bridge make it seem like a thrilling experience, actually visiting the bridge is anything but. The only thing thrilling about the bridge is the number of people on the bridge at any given time and feeling my knuckles whiten as I wonder whether the glass will crack from the weight.

For a little context, theZhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge is near the stunning Wuling Mountain Range. The region is known for its 3,000 quartzite sandstone pillars that look like floating mountains on a misty day. The glass bridge, however, isn't located near those pillars. Instead, it's a 45-minute bus ride away at a gorge known as China's "Grand Canyon."

Sitting 980 feet above the canyon floor and costing $74.6 million to build, the bridge is meant to be an architectural marvel. At more than 1,400 feet long and beautifully designed by Israeli architect Haim Dotan and Chinese engineer Zhi Dong Cheng, it lives up to that status.

The experience of actually seeing and walking on it, for a foreign tourist at least, is a nightmare.

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To start with, no one at the tourist center speaks English, few signs are in English, and the ticketing center only accepts cash, WePay/Alipay (which foreigners can't use), or UnionPay (China's national debit card). There is an ATM on-site, but when I visited two years after opening it still wasn't hooked up.

The ticket for the glass bridge alone costs 138 RMB ($22), while a ticket to explore the hiking trails for the Grand Canyon on the other side costs an additional 118 RMB ($19). For some context, keep in mind that a meal in the area probably runs about 15-30 RMB ($2-3).

Because so many tour groups and tourists attempt to visit the bridge, the center has extremely strict rules on ticketing and when you can go on the bridge. I only knew this because my partner speaks Mandarin.

Essentially, if you buy the combined bridge/Grand Canyon ticket, you can go on the bridge at any of the pre-set times throughout the day (roughly every half hour). But if you want to buy only the bridge ticket, you have to wait until 3:30 p.m. to buy it, and then you are only allowed on the bridge at 4:30 p.m.

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I got there around 1 p.m. and wanted to buy tickets for the hikes, but I was short on cash. I tried the ATMs, but, as I said, they weren't even plugged in.

When 3:30 p.m. rolled around, the ticketing center was a madhouse. Even though I stood in front of a ticket window the entire time, I almost didn't get a ticket: Tour guides were cutting the line and buying dozens of tickets at a time.

After finally securing a ticket, I had to go through a series of lines a word I use generously given the frantic scrambling that ensued over the next hour or so of walking to get to the bridge. It was mayhem.

Even though the bridge caps the number of people allowed in at 800 people at a time, it was still crowded to the point where it was hard to not get bumped by other people constantly.

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Few people are simply walking on the bridge or taking in the view. Just about everyone is trying to do the same thing: Take a selfie on the glass-bottomed floor. Plus, the glass panels were scuffed up to the point that I was mostly looking at scratches and reflections when I looked down anyways.

On the flip side, the view was gorgeous and the weather was perfect breezy, sunny, and around 72 degrees. But we were there in April, and peak season for Zhangjiajie is during the hot, humid summer months when the temperature picks up to 83 degrees Fahrenheit or higher.

By the time I left, I couldn't have been more relieved to get out of there. It felt like a colossal waste of a day. That feeling was doubled the next day, when I visited the breathtaking mountains of Zhangjiajie National Forest Park.

The scene at the park was far more relaxed and the scenery even more spectacular than what I saw at the glass bridge. I was cursing myself for not spending an extra day exploring the magical stone pillars and green landscape of the forest park.

Visiting the glass bridge was the first and last time I decided to visit a site because a viral video told me to.

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See Also:

SEE ALSO: Traveling the world for a year showed me real life doesn't always live up to the hype. These are the most disappointing places I've been.

DON'T MISS: I went to my first Priority Pass lounge in the US after visiting dozens abroad, and international ones are light-years better due to the food

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