China has begun construction on what it claims will be the longest and tallest glass-bottom bridge in the world. The bridge will be suspended across Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon in Hunans scenic Zhangjiajie National Park, which has claims to have inspired visuals for James Camerons 2009 film Avatar.

An investor founded Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Co to carry out the project and is putting a total of around 250m yuan (£25.4m, $39m) into the bridges construction. Israeli Haim Dotan, who designed the Expo 2010 Shanghais Israel Pavilion, is the chief architect behind the project and China Construction Group, which has been hired for the bridges construction, began work in June this year.

When completed, project engineers say the bridge will be 984ft above ground and 1411ft in length. The bridge itself will be six metres wide, with several glass observatories at various ends. Each glass panel of the walkway will be 1.9in thick.

Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge will allow tourists to enjoy the view, and it also has the capability to allow them to go bungee jumping. It will be the worlds first tallest and longest suspension glass-bottomed bridge, said project manager, Guo Kun.

Guo said there was nothing to worry on the safety front. People, especially tourists, will worry a lot since the bridge is all made of glass, but I want to tell everyone that there is no need to worry, because we have done numerous tests, including conducting precise calculation of its carrying capacity when building this glass bridge, said Guo.

During this years National Holiday travel rush in early October, tourists at Yuntai Mountain Park in northern Henan province reported cracks in a glass panel along another glass-bottom walkway. Since then, that bridge has been closed for maintenance.

The park will limit the number of people on the bridge at once. In accordance with design requirements, we will have a limit on the number of tourists that can walk on the bridge, as in we can only have 800 tourists on the bridge at the same time. We will control the number of tourists at the entrances to the site to ensure safety of the bridge, he said.

The construction of the bridge should be completed at the end of this year, and will be officially open to tourists in January 2016.