The Korea–Russia Friendship Bridge is a rail bridge over the Tumen River. It was commissioned in 1959 as a replacement for a temporary wooden bridge. Located immediately downstream from the China–North Korea–Russia tripoint, the bridge is the sole crossing point on the 17 km long North Korea–Russia border. Planks are laid between the tracks making crossing of road vehicles possible by special arrangement, but it is primarily a rail bridge. The tracks are dual gauge because the Russian railroad system uses a track gauge of 1,520 mm (4 ft 11 27⁄32 in) while the North Korean system uses 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in).
In October 2017 a fiber optic cable running across the bridge provided North Korea with an additional connection to the global Internet through Russia’s TransTelekom provider, a subsidiary of Russian national railway operator Russian Railways. It allows the country to be less dependent on its primary internet connection through China Unicom (similarly running over the Sino-Korean Friendship Bridge), after it was the target of a DDoS attack during the 2017 North Korea crisis.
Wikipedia
Embracing the Unity
Scenes from the Workers’ Paradise
Google street views from the area of Russia just northeast of the Friendship Bridge (as indicated by the little danglin’ Google person):
Longhu Coffee Shop
I’d like a Flat White Pistachio Latte Honduran Americano, Comrade.