Published on: 10/29/2015IST

China's 50-Lane Traffic Jam Is Every Commuter's Worst Nightmare

User Image Anuj Tiwari Last updated on: 10/29/2015, Permalink

What happens when a checkpoint merges 50 lanes down to 20.
Image Reuters/China Daily

Traffic after the holidays tend to be pretty awful. But China may have just turned every driver’s worst nightmare into reality as hundreds of millions of people headed home at the end of a Golden Week, a week-long national holiday.

Thousands of motorists found themselves stranded on Tuesday in what looks from above like a 50-lane parking lot on the G4 Beijing-Hong Kong-Macau Expressway, one of the country’s busiest roads. Some are dubbing the traffic jam a “carpocalypse,” while others are calling it “carmageddon.”

Highway to hell: Thousands of Chinese motorists were stranded on a motorway going into Beijing as week-long national holiday wraps up

Though foggy weather may have played a role, the real culprit is a new checkpoint that forces traffic to merge from 50 lanes down to just 20, according to The People’s Daily. Traffic was reportedly backed up for hours.

 

China is no stranger to these ridiculous traffic jams, especially on national highways. In 2010, gridlock spanning more than 74 miles on the stretch between the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and Beijing left drivers with nowhere to go for a staggering 12 days. That time blame fell on everything from road construction to broken down cars and fender-benders.

People played cards to pass the time while nearby vendors took the opportunity to sell food and water at premium prices. “If you said ‘no’ or complained about the price they threaten to break your [wind]shields,” one driver told the Inner Mongolia Morning Post.

In 2012, the government’s decision to grant free road travel during the same national holiday turned 24 motorways in 16 provinces into a massive parking lot with more than 85 million people stuck in their cars.

No end in sight: The incredible gridlock took place on one of the country's busiest and widest highways with as many as 50 lanes

Pic shows: Traffic jam on Beijing¿Hong Kong¿Macau Expressway.nnAerial footage of a congested highway made headlines this week highlighting the fact that several hundred million people have begun their return journeys from a week-long national holiday.nnAn incredible 750 million Chinese people - or half of China¿s total population - went on holiday during Golden Week, the seven-day holiday marking the country¿s National Day on October 1.nnPhotos of the G4 Beijing-Hong Kong-Macau Expressway show hundreds of thousands of drivers and their families starting to make their way home on the penultimate day of the holidays.nnVideo footage of the massive traffic jam that could be seen converging on tollbooths on the 2,273-kilometre (1,412-mile) expressway were widely shared online. The route serves as the main route for cross-country travellers in the populous eastern part of China, where most of the country¿s population resides.nnBut the scenes were also repeated on many expressways across the country.nnChina¿s National Tourism Administration confirmed that this year¿s Golden Week tourism figures have shown an incredible year-on-year 6.1 percent increase, with record-breaking numbers of travellers on Chinese highways.nnThe administration said the tourist numbers have also exceeded those recorded during this year¿s Chinese New Year - or Spring Festival - travel season which occurred in February.nn(ends)n

The road is long: Pictures taken two hours after the traffic jam began show vehicles had queued up for hundreds of metres at a toll

Endless wait: Traffic authority said the jam was caused by a new checkpoint which caused a bottleneck at the other side of the toll

Vehicles are seen stuck in a traffic jam near a toll station as people return home at the end of a week-long national day holiday, in Beijing, China, October 6, 2015. Picture taken October 6, 2015. REUTERS/China Daily CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA

Patience is essential: The shocking scene was one of the many traffic nightmares across the country yesterday. Motorways in Shanghai and Nanjing also saw serious congestion


10/29/2015 | | Permalink