Linking Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, the King Fahd Causeway Bridge opened in 1986 and measures 16 miles long.
But most of the world's longest bridges are in China. The Jiaozhou Bay Bridge, for example, spans 16.6 miles and connects the eastern city of Qingdao to the island of Huangdao.
Also in China, the Donghai Bridge has a long, narrow speedway that measures 20.2 miles. It connects Shanghai and Zhejiang and was completed in 2005.
The Runyang Yangtze River Bridge — which crosses the Yangtze River in the Chinese province of Jiangsu — actually consists of two bridges. The island of Shiyezhou sits in the middle of the 22.1-mile-long complex.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdWhen China's 22.1-mile Hangzhou Bay Bridge opened in 2008, it cut the travel time from Ningbo and Shanghai in half, from four hours to two.
A twin, concrete bridge in Louisiana called the Manchac Swamp Bridge stretches 22.8 miles long. It opened in 1979.
Two parallel bridges crossing Louisiana's brackish estuary make up the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway. The longer of the two bridges is 23.8 miles.
Completed in late 2017, the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge in China is the world's longest bridge to traverse an ocean. It is expected to span 34 miles when it opens in July.
In Thailand, the Bang Na Expressway is a six-lane elevated highway that's considered the world's longest road bridge. From end to end, it measures 34 miles.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe 70.6-mile-long Tianjin Grand Bridge is part of the Beijing–Shanghai high-speed railway in China. It runs between Langfang and Qingxian.
In Taiwan, a series of arches helps hold up the Changhua-Kaohsiung Viaduct's railway track. Completed in 2007, the project is 97.8 miles in length.
Extending 102.4 miles, China's Danyang-Kunshan Grand Bridge claims the title of the world's longest bridge. The construction process employed 10,000 workers, lasted four years, cost about $8.5 billion, and ended in 2010.