The Elevator of One Hundred Dragons

The Elevator of One Hundred Dragons

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It’s like living a scene out of Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator:

You start out you-know-not-how-deep underground and climb into a small room that’s glass on three sides. Then you accelerate up at high speed — three meters per second, to be exact. For what feels like a long time there’s no natural light, only the hue from fluorescent bulbs illuminating the solid rock zooming past outside the elevator. Until, suddenly — WOW! The outside world opens up and the impossibly steep and tree-studded sandstone peaks of the Wulingyuan UNESCO World Heritage area come into view.

That’s what it’s like to ride the Elevator of One Hundred Dragons — also known as the Bailong Elevator — located inside the Zhangjiajie National Forest Park in Hunan, China.

intra hotelviews 275 The Elevator of One Hundred Dragons The elevator, we are compelled to note, is neither the world’s highest1, nor the world’s fastest2, as most local guides (and not a few websites) claim. The Bailong Elevator does, however, own three spots in the Guinness Book of World Records:

• World’s tallest full-exposure outdoor elevator.

• World’s tallest double-deck sightseeing elevator.

• Passenger elevator with fastest speed-to-carrying capacity ratio in the world.

[ ALSO ON SCS: The Best View from a Hotel Room in Hong Kong ]

To those, Spot Cool Stuff would like to add another world superlative, albeit one that’s subjective and unofficial:

• World’s scariest elevator to ride.

zhangjiajie cool travel blog s The Elevator of One Hundred Dragons Stand by the elevator’s floor-to-ceiling glass wall for your ride and you’ll look down upon the jagged rocks below as they get further . . . and further . . . and further away. At this point you should try not to think about the quality of the elevator’s construction, which has been the source of some controversy — a year after elevator opened in 2002 it was closed again because of safety concerns. Then, to that mix of vertigo and stress, you can add earthquakes. The greater Wulingyuan area is prone to them. Three separate monitors are built into the elevator shaft to measure seismic activity — like that will help you when you are in the elevator half way up.

At the top, you’ll be 330 meters (1,070 ft.) further above sea level than you were when you started. It is at this point that your taste of Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator will give way to another movie: Avatar. James Cameron filmed portions of the blockbuster here. The fictional Hallelujah Mountains of Pandora were inspired by the very real, and completely stunning, peaks around Wulingyuan. Until you can travel there yourself, check out the photos below.

published: 28 Jan 2014
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1  The tallest elevator in the world is, unsurprisingly, in the world’s tallest building: the Burj Dubai in the UAE.

2  Faster elevators seem to go into service every few months. At the time of writing, the lift inside the Taipei 101 Building holds the world elevator speed record: 60 km/h (37 mph) or three times the speed of the Bailong Elevator.

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Planning Your Bailong Elevator Trip

When: The elevator is open year round but does occasionally shuts down in bad weather. Call in advance (011-86/744-836-2222)

If you go: Consider riding the cable car down. Buses transport tourists between the two stations.You can also hike up to the top; the Zhangjiajie Club runs tours.

Family friendly? Absolutely, though the elevator is not for kiddos (or parents, for that matter) easily scared of heights.

Where to stay: The Zhangjiajie Pullman Hotel is the best of a mostly bland lot.

For your bookshelf: Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook: Recipes from Hunan Province

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More from Spot Cool Stuff:

The Best Travel Cameras
5 Temples & Monasteries on Perilous Cliff Sides
The Cabrio: The World’s Best Double Decker Aerial Tramway
The Sanyou Cave Restaurant ↔ it’s in China too
China’s Pastel Painted Danxia Landforms



Responses

  1. Anna4 says:

    The elevator is highlight of Zhangjiajie, the sky walk around the peak would be great, made of glasses

    [Reply to this comment]

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