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10 most dangerous roads in the world

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These roads demand the ultimate in driving dexterity, and have become infamous for their sheer drops, narrow passes, rough conditions and unforgiving terrain.
So whether you want to plan your next expedition or just freak yourself out, here are 10 of the most difficult, dangerous and crazy roads to traverse on the planet.

10. Austrian Road, Kazakhstan
A road that joins Kazakhstan to Austria? Think again. This 37-mile road is named after the Austro-Hungarian prisoners of war responsible for its construction between 1915 and 1917.

The track takes drivers from the 990-metre-high Bukhtarma Valley up to the 2,137-metre-high Burkhatskiy Pass in Eastern Kazakhstan.

The shoddy route, forged using picks and shovels, meanders through a national park, offering incredible views of the Kara-Koba River.

Don’t spend too long gazing out of the window though, dilapidated bridges regularly fall into disrepair, making the route frequently impossible.

If you’re lucky(?) enough to attempt a drive with all crossings intact, be sure to check the weather forecast to avoid potentially deadly landslides, which have been known to strike with little to no warning.

9. Route 622 (Svalvogar Road), Iceland
The 13-mile Route 622 offers stunning views of Northwestern Icelandic coastline, including the Dýrafjördur and Arnarfjördur fjords.

Precariously carved under towering cliffs, the Svalvogar Road links Thingeyri and Lokinhamrar across a region prone to avalanches, heavy snowfall, strong winds and landslides. Expect unpaved roads, steep drops, and the loose surface of a narrow, rocky track.

8. Taroko Gorge Road, Taiwan
Taroko means ‘magnificent and splendid’ in the aboriginal Truku tribe’s language – words meant for the views of the national park, rather than your driving experience.

In 2012, a driver and 13 tourists were lucky to escape with their lives when their bus failed to climb an incline in the road. Their vehicle rolled backwards hitting one of the few barriers and fell down a slope, causing injury to the passengers within.

7. Engineer Pass, USA

Colorado is home to The Rockies, a mountainous region where Engineers Pass can be found 3,901 metres (12,800 ft) above sea level.

Frequent avalanches, heavy snowfall and landslides make dodging patches of ice along the way seem a breeze by comparison.
6. Zoji La Pass, India
Vertigo sufferers look away now. The Zoji La Pass, or Zozila Pass as it’s sometimes known, can be found 3,528 metres (11,575 ft) up in the Himalayas.

The road connects the people of Ladakh to Kashmir Valley via a one-lane trail, which hugs some of the tallest mountains in the world.

Zoji La is often covered in snow, anywhere between 15 and 24 metres deep, which takes the Border Roads Organisation in the region up to two months to clear.

In 2009, clearing efforts couldn’t prevent the need to rescue 350 people stranded on the road thanks to heavy snowfall. Worse still, in 2012, 11 tourists were killed as their vehicle skidded off the barrier-less pass into a deep gorge.

5. Fairy Meadows Road, Pakistan
Fairy Meadows Road is 10-miles-long and reaches heights of 3,300 metres (10,826 ft) above sea level, and if you’ve been paying attention up until now, you may have guessed it: there are no guardrails.

The road was carved by locals hundreds of years ago and hasn’t been maintained since. It starts at the Karakoram Highway (number 2 on our list) and ends in the village of Tato.

Money is being raised by the Fairy Meadows toll to fund eventual resurfacing work, but for now, it’s still one of the wildest, most dangerous roads in the world.

4. BAM Road, Russia

Built as a service road for the Baikal Amur Mainline railway, the unkept BAM Road stretches 2,700 miles across eastern Siberia via bogs, broken bridges and potholes.

Be sure to check your tyre tread depth as your vehicle will have to contend with fast-flowing creek crossings and year-round muddy terrain.

3. Sichuan-Tibet Highway, China
most-dangerous-crazy-roads-sichuan-tibet-highway

With an average elevation of 4,000 metres (13,123 ft), the Sichuan-Tibet Highway has all the makings of one of the world’s craziest roads.

Landslides and rock avalanches are commonplace across the 1,330 mile route that starts in Chengdu, Sichuan and ends in Lhasa, Tibet. A trip along the length of the highway can take up to 15 days.

2. Karakoram Highway, China – Pakistan

Perched 4,693 metres (15,397 ft) above sea level, the Karakoram Highway, or KKH, connects China and Pakistan over a total of 800 miles.

It was started in 1959 and completed in 1986, but only after a shocking 810 Pakistani and 82 Chinese workers lost their lives in its construction.

1. Yungas Road (Death Road), Bolivia
The disconcertingly-named ‘Death Road’ covers a stretch of 43 miles, connecting Coroico and La Paz, the capital city of Bolivia.

If that wasn’t bad enough, it also includes over 200 vertigo-inducing hairpin turns, some with sheer drops of 1,100 metres.

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