Jutting out from a sheer cliff 1,430 meters high, the glass skywalk in Zhangjiajie National Forest Park makes mice of men.
            
            
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A tourist gingerly makes  her way on a glass skywalk built along the cliffs of Tianmen Mountain,  Zhangjiajie, Hunan province, on Wednesday. Ding Yunjuan / for China  Daily
CHANGSHA / BEIJING - Jutting out from a sheer cliff 1,430 meters  high, the glass skywalk in Zhangjiajie National Forest Park makes mice  of men.
"My girlfriend blamed me for not acting bravely," said a man from  Shandong province, who refused to give his name because he was ashamed  of not having the guts to walk across the see-through walkway.
"I will challenge the road next time, when I'm ready for the height, and then I will shout my name out loud."
The glass skywalk spans 60 meters of a 2-km loop encircling the  vertical cliffs of Tianmen Mountain in Hunan province, a UNESCO World  Heritage Site.
"Tourists can walk, run or even jump on the walkway as the fence and  planks are all tempered glass," said Tian Huilin, deputy general manager  at the tourism office of the Tianmen Mountain Scenic Spot.
Tian said the glass plank road is the first of its kind in the  country and dwarfs urban skyscrapers for a higher and more distant view.  
"The experience is unique. Tourists can have a bird's-eye view of the  rocky pinnacles rising from a coverlet of dense subtropical vegetation  and sometimes veiled by clouds through glass, which will add thrills and  fun for the tourists."
According to Tian, the project was inspired by the Grand Canyon  Skywalk in the United States. The US counterpart is an observatory with a  glass bottom to allow visitors to gaze into the gulf beneath their  feet.
Li Aiping, a tourist from Hunan province, said the glass section of  the walkway made her heart beat like a drum, but she enjoyed it.
"My mind went blank when I heard somebody walk beside me screaming," she said. "I probably won't dare to walk on it again."
Some people, however, are worried that a large number of tourists might jam the road.
"The idea is so cool. But if every tourist wanted to have a try, I'm  sure people would have to wait in line for hours as I have seen in many  other scenic spots," said Beijing resident Kang Wenxuan.
But environmentalists have criticized the glass skywalk, saying that the overhang will tarnish the pristine mountain.
"The glass road is odd compared with the ancient plank roads, which  appear to be made of stone or wood and are more harmonious with the  landscape," said Wang Yanyong, a tourism planning expert at Beijing  Jiaotong University. 
He added that innovation should not go against the basic natural and cultural context.
In 2010, the number of tourists going to Zhangjiajie reached 24 million, up more than 24 percent year-on-year.