Worlds most dangerous roads

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ianrauk

Tattooed Beat Messiah
Location
Rides Ti2
Okey doke.. how many of these have you travelled?

The world's most dangerous roads

Below, in reverse order, is a top 10 of the world's worst roads, compiled by the Association for Safe International Road Travel.

These roads will have you driving among the clouds, along fast-eroding cliff tops with 3,500m drops, across deadly streams, through bandit territory and more. Suddenly, our local drive looks a whole lot less stressful...

10) Grand Trunk Road (India)
'GT', as it's often called, was built about 500 years ago to connect the east and western regions of the Indian subcontinent. The 1550-mile road is full of trucks and rattling buses manned by drivers without much respect for their lives - or yours. And then there's the cyclists, the pedestrians, the salesmen, the ox carts, the cows, the buffalos....

9) Patiopoulo-Perdikaki Road (Greece)
This dirt track leads from Patiopoulo down to Perdikaki in the Agrafa region of Greece. It's steep, busy, full of huge potholes and extremely slippery (due to the gravel surface). It's also very narrow in places, with no lines or guard rails on the edges. That's less than ideal given the sheer drop... on both sides.

8) A44 (United Kingdom)
Much of the A44, a major road which runs from Oxford to Aberystwyth in west Wales, is fairly innocuous, but a 25-mile section between Leominster and Worcester has several blind corners. A quarter of accidents here involve vehicles leaving the road, and even more are head-on collisions. Nevertheless, the route is popular with thrill-seeking bikers.

7) Luxor-al Hurghada Road (Egypt)
Egypt's most dangerous road links two tourist locations - the ancient city of Luxor in the south, and Hurghada, a hub for diving schools on the coast of the Red Sea. The route is well-known bandit territory, with travellers facing a high risk of ambush and hijack. To avoid detection at night, the vast majority of drivers opt not to use their headlights. And that has a rather predicable side-effect...

6) Cotopaxi Volcan (Ecuador)
This 25-mile long dirt track, one of countless dangerous roads in Ecuador, connects the Pan American Highway with the Cotopaxi Volcan National Park, which boasts one of the highest active volcanoes in the world. The treacherous route is peppered with holes, but the 'highlight' of the journey comes when you need to cross a bridge-less stream. It's particularly dangerous during flash floods... and flash floods seem to occur here even in the lightest of rains. You won't find that mentioned in any travel brochure.

5) Coastal roads (Croatia)
The Croatian coast makes the list due to the narrow and twisty nature of the roads, and a general lack of markings, lay-bys and side rails. The scenery on the jagged coast is absolutely stunning, but if you're driving, it's probably best to watch where you're going - and keep your fingers crossed that others do too.

4) Pan American Highway (Costa Rica)
The Pan-American Highway system, the longest drivable road in the world, runs an incredible 30,000 miles from Alaska to the lower reaches of South America. Several stretches can be considered 'tricky', but the most infamous section is a high mountain pass called 'Cerro de la Muerte' in Costa Rica. It's steep, narrow, twisty, full of holes and susceptible to flash floods and landslides. The name translates as 'Hill of Death'.

3) Sichuan-Tibet Highway (China)
At least 100,000 people are said to die on Chinese roads each year - or one person every five minutes. You'll want to avoid the 1,250-mile long (but not very wide) Sichuan-Tibet Highway, which traverses at least a dozen different mountains with an average height of 4,000-5,000m. The high altitude means you'll be driving among clouds, and there's a high risk of landslides and avalanches to boot.

2) BR-116 (Brazil)
Brazil's second longest road runs almost 1000 miles from Porto Alegre to Rio de Janeiro. The middle section, which covers around 250 miles from Curitiba to São Paulo, has steep cliffs, poor conditions and unstable weather. Officially it's named Rodovia Régis Bittencourt, but it's known locally as 'Rodovia da Morte'. That's 'Highway of Death'.

1) The North Yungas Road (Bolivia)
Some of the choices here may seem a little quirky, but few will deny that Bolivia's 'Death Road' is the most dangerous road in the world. North Yungas Road snakes across roughly 45 miles of the Andes with drops of up to 3,500m... and dozens of wrecked vehicles at the bottom. Drivers need to contend with crazy hairpins, oncoming traffic (often rushing to beat you into bends), an almost constant layer of fog and, during tropical downpours, high risk of landslides too. Tourist companies now cash in on the road's notoriety by offering extreme bike tours down it. We'll give that a miss, thanks.
 
U

User482

Guest
Next spring, I'll be cycling down number 1 in your list.
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
This is just a travel agent's list of "Roads With The Most Spectacular Crashes that You Can Boast You Have Driven/Ridden", not really dangerous roads. I'll bet that the roads in many African cities are far more dangerous; for example in metropolitan Lagos (my speciality) pedestrians are frequently killed dashing across or thrown off bridges in juju killings, you can see a couple of bodies a week on average. Okadas or motorcycle taxi drivers are killed daily because they ride like nutters. Buses frequently overturn killing every passenger. Lorries fall over crushing pedestrians or Okadas, or just break up and pile into bus queues or go-slows. Petrol tankers often explode, one exploded on a bridge showering everybody beneath with blazing fuel, a Swiss engineer I knew got 65% burns but was medi-vacced out and lived. Fights are commonplace especially when drivers get frustrated at the buses going the wrong way or driving up pavements. Armed robbers in hired Police uniforms shoot people with hired Police guns. Life expectancy for people like bus, truck and Okada drivers is very short.... need I go on?
 

Crankarm

Guru
Location
Nr Cambridge
Rigid Raider said:
This is just a travel agent's list of "Roads With The Most Spectacular Crashes that You Can Boast You Have Driven/Ridden", not really dangerous roads. I'll bet that the roads in many African cities are far more dangerous; for example in metropolitan Lagos (my speciality) pedestrians are frequently killed dashing across or thrown off bridges in juju killings, you can see a couple of bodies a week on average. Okadas or motorcycle taxi drivers are killed daily because they ride like nutters. Buses frequently overturn killing every passenger. Lorries fall over crushing pedestrians or Okadas, or just break up and pile into bus queues or go-slows. Petrol tankers often explode, one exploded on a bridge showering everybody beneath with blazing fuel, a Swiss engineer I knew got 65% burns but was medi-vacced out and lived. Fights are commonplace especially when drivers get frustrated at the buses going the wrong way or driving up pavements. Armed robbers in hired Police uniforms shoot people with hired Police guns. Life expectancy for people like bus, truck and Okada drivers is very short.... need I go on?

Jeese it's bad in Lancashire. A lot of material for Police Camera Action :evil:.
 

Brains

Legendary Member
Location
Greenwich
1, 6 and 10

Whilst Lagos is lethal and may have the most idiotic drivers on the planet, the 'road' down from La Paz quite rightly listed as Number 1 due to the old American Rigs belching unburnt deisel as they blast up the road.

Rigs going uphill have right of way, and if that means your local bus with 50 people on it has to go over the cliff before they are pushed off, don't expect the rig to even stop. They don't. They won't. They can't.

Having said which the road does make an excelent downhill MTB run.
It's down hill for something like 50 miles
It's rough all the way
You have no problem keeping up with the downhill traffic
As a bike you are narrow enough not to get forced off by the uphill rigs
(You are on the cliff face the entire way down, no barriers for most of the length
Some wonderfull views on the way down
Many interesting roadside memorials, usually with dozens of names on them
Some amazing totally flat vehicles to be seen, (this tends to happen when landing on the roof from over 500m without a parachute)
And you and your bike can catch a bus up from the bottom and go all the way to the top for about one US dollar (and your bus has right of way all the way up !)
 

Cheddar George

oober member
I have Travelled south from Curitiba through the mountains on the most bizarre 3 lane road, one lane each way and the middle lane for overtaking/playing chicken. There were plenty of wrecks on the road side or down in the valley.

I think that the Indian attitude to driving and road safety is more dangerous than the actual roads. My highlight would be a night time drive on a dual carriageway where due to resurfacing we were diverted on to the otherside driving against the traffic at 60 mph ... not a contraflow, just driving the wrong way up a dual carriageway !!
There was nothing to divert you back on to the otherside and it was too dark to see if the roadworks had ended, it was only when we could see traffic was using that side of the road again that the driver decided he would cross back over at the next gap in the barrier. ;):eek:
 

Wigsie

Nincompoop
Location
Kent
Have hitch hiked along the Luxor-al Hurghada Road a few times then south down to the Sudanese border.
 

rh100

Well-Known Member
All those exotic sounding places and all we can offer is the A bloody 44

Lagos sounds nice
 
Years ago I did a tour through Japan. They do a good line in tunnels through hills or mini-mountains - why go around, when you can go straight through it?
Some of the tunnels have side-walks for walkers/cyclists. Some don't. Now that was scary and a half. The almost-darkness, the traffic, the noise and everything was shoulder-clenchingly intimidating. If I approached that sort of tunnel I'd don my super-reflective yellow waistcoat; all the drivers would switch their lights on. Then I'd go for it. Scooby Doo says Yi - i - i - kes!
 
Brains said:
1, 6 and 10

Whilst Lagos is lethal and may have the most idiotic drivers on the planet, the 'road' down from La Paz quite rightly listed as Number 1 due to the old American Rigs belching unburnt deisel as they blast up the road.

Rigs going uphill have right of way, and if that means your local bus with 50 people on it has to go over the cliff before they are pushed off, don't expect the rig to even stop. They don't. They won't. They can't.

Having said which the road does make an excelent downhill MTB run.
It's down hill for something like 50 miles
It's rough all the way
You have no problem keeping up with the downhill traffic
As a bike you are narrow enough not to get forced off by the uphill rigs
(You are on the cliff face the entire way down, no barriers for most of the length
Some wonderfull views on the way down
Many interesting roadside memorials, usually with dozens of names on them
Some amazing totally flat vehicles to be seen, (this tends to happen when landing on the roof from over 500m without a parachute)
And you and your bike can catch a bus up from the bottom and go all the way to the top for about one US dollar (and your bus has right of way all the way up !)

To be really hardcore though you have to do it on a Tesco's MTB.
Would probably need a new one for each run though.
 
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