Chenab Bridge: World’s Highest Railway Arch Unites Kashmir With Engineering Marvel

Where snow-capped peaks meet the sky and the Chenab carves deep into the earth, India has etched its resolve in steel. The Chenab Bridge, now the world’s highest railway bridge, rises 359 metres above the riverbed, standing as a symbol of engineering excellence and national ambition.

Part of the Udhampur-Srinagar-Baramulla Rail Link (USBRL) project, the bridge connects not just terrain but aspirations — linking the Kashmir Valley to the rest of India with an all-weather, reliable rail route.

Stretching 1,315 metres across the Chenab River near the Salal Dam, the bridge features a stunning main arch span of 467 metres, and can withstand wind speeds up to 266 kmph. It surpasses the Eiffel Tower in height and is nearly five times taller than the Qutub Minar from riverbed to rail level.

The construction of this engineering marvel involved over 28,000 metric tonnes of steel and introduced a first-of-its-kind cable crane system in Indian Railways — used to ferry materials across a 915-metre-wide gorge with two massive cable cars and pylons towering over 100 metres high.

Built in the geologically complex and unstable terrain of the Himalayas, the Chenab Bridge is more than a feat of infrastructure — it is a symbol of India’s grit, innovation, and unwavering resolve to bring progress to even the most remote corners.

As it stands tall over the Chenab, the bridge doesn’t just connect two mountains — it connects dreams, development, and a new era for Jammu & Kashmir.

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