GUANGZHOU, Feb. 15 (Xinhua) -- Authorities in south
China's Guangdong Province have closed part of a trunk expressway following a
road collapse caused by subsidence.
Motorists reported the collapse at about midday on
Thursday. No injuries or vehicle damage were reported.
One of the piers, coded H32, that supported a bridge
along the expressway linking Guangzhou with Shenzhen close to Hong Kong subsided
by about half a meter, causing about 50 meters of the road surface to drop, said
Lan Hengshui, deputy managing director of the expressway company.
The subsidence left a V-shaped indentation on the
Wangniudun section of the expressway, between Guangzhou and the manufacturing
town of Dongguan.
One driver, surnamed Chen, said he clearly felt his
empty tanker truck go down a ramp and then up again when he passed Wangniudun at
12:15 p.m.. "I pulled into the emergency lane and called the police."
Traffic police immediately closed the
Dongguan-Guangzhou section of the expressway, and diverted vehicles to the
Beijing-Zhuhai expressway and state highway 107 connecting Beijing and Shenzhen.
The expressway company said the pier was undergoing
maintenance when the subsidence occurred.
One witness, a woman surnamed Liu, said she and her
husband, a repair worker, had been living for four months in a shed next to the
pier. "I was cooking when I heard a crack from the pier. It was so loud that I
thought the bridge would fall apart."
The incident raised memories of June last year, when
the 1,600-meter-long Jiujiang bridge over the Xijiang River in Foshan collapsed,
killing nine people.
The road collapse and subsequent traffic control
measures have extended the trip from Dongguan to Guangzhou's Baiyun Airport from
70 minutes to two hours, said Zhong Jinhui, a civil aviation official in
Dongguan.
Meanwhile, cargo transport costs from Shenzhen to
Guangzhou were likely to rise by at least 20 percent, said Chen Shaopeng, a
senior executive from a Guangzhou-based logistics firm.
The provincial transportation bureau said repairs on
the road surface will start after the post-Spring Festival traffic peak ends on
March 2.
The Guangzhou-Shenzhen Expressway, which opened in
1995, reported a daily average flow of 348,000 vehicles last August, despite its
designed capacity of 80,000 vehicles a day.
The operators complained overloaded trucks carrying
up to 192 tons, almost four times the country's upper limit of 55 tons, often
used the route, but traffic authorities never enforced the regulations.