In the mountains of local Vietnam, a goliath combine of hands lifts a brilliant string of walkway high over the clifftops, as though the mountain itself has grown limbs.”I feel like I’m strolling on mists,” said Vuong Thuy Linh, a vacationer from Hanoi. “It’s so exceptional”.
Cau Vang or the “Brilliant Bridge” in Vietnam’s Ba Na Hills has pulled in scores of sightseers since it opened in June, anxious to see a novel bit of engineering acclaimed for its uncommon design.The walker walkway, outlined by TA Landscape Architecture in Ho Chi Minh City, sits at more than 1,000 meters (3,280 feet) above ocean level and stretches out over the treetops from the edge of a verdant bluff face, offering travelers continuous perspectives of the grand scene underneath.
The extension was intended to summon the picture of the “monster hands of Gods, hauling a portion of gold out of the land,” said Vu Viet Anh, Design Principal at TA Landscape Architecture.The Ba Na Hills, a prominent escape for the French amid the frontier control of Vietnam, got more than 2.7 million guests a year ago, as indicated by the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism.But it is the Golden Bridge and its backings – two colossal stone-hued human hands styled so that it looks as though the wilderness is attempting to recover them – which have accumulated the most consideration from guests.