Reasons To Include Zhangjiajie, China In Your Bucket List

With the new year comes a new set of bucket list destinations. For those looking for a magical one not too far away, consider Zhangjiajie in the province of Hunan in central China, the site of one of James Cameron’s inspirations for the floating mountains of Pandora in the 2010 blockbuster film Avatar. There, you can see misty mountains, towering pillars of sandstone and quartz, and an opening in the rock the locals refer to as Heaven’s Gate.

One of the world’s longest and highest glass-bottomed bridges hangs above a canyon.

To get there, fly Guangzhou via Cebu Pacific Air, and from there, take a domestic flight to Zhangjiajie, although if you’d rather take a Cebu Pacific flight to the more popular Shanghai, a domestic flight will get you to Zhangjiajie as well.

Travel Warehouse Inc., in partnership with UOS China, can take you there, as this is one of those trips where you will definitely need a well-planned, detailed itinerary and a travel guide. You’ll be hard pressed to find English speakers anywhere, since even hotel receptionists speak no English.

The highlight of the visit is Zhangjiajie National Forest Park, part of the larger Wulingyuan Scenic Area. In 1992, the area was recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Take the Bailong elevator —translated as “One Hundred Dragons Elevator” — that is reportedly the highest in the world, built into a cliff that climbs up to over a thousand feet into the sky in about a minute and a half. It opens its doors to the astounding site of the quartz and sandstone pillars. One of them is named Avatar Hallelujah Mountain, an homage to the film, and it is spectacular.

Elsewhere in the park, a glass-bottomed bridge, one of the world’s longest and highest, hangs above a canyon. Definitely not for those afraid of heights, but in the shoe covers they make you put over your footwear, you can glide across the glass and feel like you’re sky walking.

Tranquil Baofeng Lake is the color of jade.

More relaxing is a cruise down the green Baofeng Lake, surrounded by mountains, with rock formations in the shape of animals. Close by is a waterfall gushing down a cliff.

On another day, take a cable car up Tianmen mountain, one of the longest passenger cableways in the world. Looking down, one sees the Heaven Linking Avenue that twists and turns 99 times as it leads to the holy Tianmen cave, or Heaven’s Gate.

The natural portal through the mountain can be reached by walking up 999 steps — the number 9 is a lucky number, as you may have figured out — on foot, which the locals say is a stairway to heaven.

Make sure to leave enough time to watch the shows in Zhangjiajie. The indoor show that plays out stories and legends that weave the cultural tapestry of the city is held at the Charming Xiangxi Theater, the oldest theater in Zhangjiajie. It includes fire and drums, flying daggers and acrobatics, and song and dance that delight the thousands of people that fill up the theater night after night.

Meanwhile, the outdoor show is a spectacle of light and sound with over 600 performers, and a set that includes houses built into the mountainside. The silhouettes of the actual Tianmen mountain and other peaks serve as its magnificent backdrop. A perfect way to wind down your trip.

Express Your Reaction
Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Comments

comments

More Stories

Reddit Is Where The Internet Thinks Out Loud

The internet grew louder, but trust grew thinner. Many users now turn to Reddit not for polish, but for conversation that feels grounded in lived experience and honest disagreement.

Popularity Is The Enemy Of Leadership

Popularity feels comforting in leadership, but it often replaces clarity with approval, and over time the need to be liked quietly weakens the very authority leaders are meant to carry.

When Confidence Turns Dangerous: Why Overconfident CEOs Need The Right Boards To Deliver Breakthrough Innovation

New research examines how board expertise and authority can shape whether overconfident CEOs drive technological breakthroughs or expose firms to strategic risk.

When Coffee Became Retail’s Quietest And Strongest Story

Coffee is no longer a side feature in retail. It has become a tool that shapes how long customers stay, how they feel, and how naturally buying happens.

Leadership Happens Where Impact Meets Influence

Leadership isn’t a title, it’s when influence creates action, momentum, and real change.

How Avoiding Confrontation Shapes Filipino Workplace Leadership

Calm workplaces are not always healthy ones, especially when silence is maintained by fear of being seen as difficult rather than by genuine alignment.

Staying Feels Like Loyalty, Leaving Feels Like Betrayal, And Why Filipino Professionals Stay Too Long

A quiet look at how loyalty in Filipino workplaces can be praised even when growth has stalled, through the lens of Khirby Serrano’s reflection on staying, comfort, and self-respect.

When Brand Storytelling Earns Its Altitude: The Case of Cebu Pacific’s Where Dreams Fly Video Series

In this #BrandReview, Dr. Ron Jabal explains how Where Dreams Fly shows that Cebu Pacific’s strongest storytelling choice is restraint by building trust, credibility, and warmth in aviation while staying within clear reputational and safety guardrails.