Third Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge connecting Laos and Thailand
© chaiyut samsuk/Getty Image
Built to bring closer. Third Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge connecting Laos and Thailand
Before bridges, rivers set the pace of travel. Now, with bridges, people do. That shift explains why cross-border links like the Third Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge connecting Laos and Thailand matter. Bridges come in many forms, each built to meet a specific challenge. Arch bridges manage compression, suspension bridges span long distances and concrete box-girder bridges prioritise stability and load efficiency. This bridge uses the box-girder design, making it a practical choice for crossing the wide, fast-moving Mekong River.
Opened in 2011, the Third Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge was developed to strengthen transport links between Nakhon Phanom Province in Thailand and Thakhek, in Khammouane Province, Laos. Thailand funded much of the project, continuing a pattern set by earlier crossings such as the First Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge between Nong Khai and Vientiane and the Second Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge linking Mukdahan and Savannakhet.
Measuring 1,423 metres, the bridge comprises two traffic lanes, serving local commuters and long-haul freight alike. This has helped ease congestion at other crossings and made cross-border movement more reliable. Beyond transport efficiency, the bridge supports logistics, tourism and cross-border cooperation, showing how infrastructure can quietly reshape regional connections without demanding attention.
Related Images
Bing Today Images
Old Town of Tallinn, Estonia
Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge, China
San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
For Waitangi Day, the Pancake Rocks on New Zealand’s South Island
Hope Valley in the Peak District
An old farm in the Shetland Islands, Scotland
The Glenfinnan Viaduct in Scotland, made famous by the Hogwarts Express in Harry Potter
At the top of Mount Fuji in Japan. Happy New Year!