Travel has been in man’s blood since the beginning of time. In order to facilitate travel, we built roads. This list looks at some of the most unusual and interesting roads. The only requirement for the list is that the road must still exist today. Most are modern.
Claim To Fame: Gravity hills appear to defy the laws of physics
Unlike the other streets on this list, this is not a specific street but rather a variety of streets – there are, in fact, hundreds around the world. When you park your car at the foot of a gravity hill (also sometimes called Magnetic hills or Mystery hills), the car will appear to roll up the hill – not down. The reason for this is an optical illusion caused by the surrounding environment. If you are interested in visiting a gravity hill, Wikipedia has a list of their locations around the world.

Claim To Fame: World’s Shortest street
Ebenezer Place is the shortest street in the world, measuring just 2.06 meters (6.8 ft). There is just one house on the street, number 1 Ebenezer Place which was built in 1883. The building is a hotel (Mackays) and the owner was instructed to paint a street name on its shortest side. It was officially declared a street in 1887.
Claim To Fame: World’s longest road
The Pan-American Highway is the longest motoring road in the world. It has replaced Yonge Street (in Toronto Canada) as the longest road since changes were made to the configuration of Highway 11 and Yonge Street in the 1990s. The Pan-American highway links the mainland nations of the Americas and is an amazing 48,000 kilometers (29,800 miles) long. The highway passes through 15 nations, including the USA, Canada, Mexico, Peru, Argentina, and El Salvador.
Claim To Fame: World’s narrowest street
Parliament Street is in Exeter, England. It is the narrowest street in the world, measuring less than 0.64m (25″) at its narrowest point. It was originally called Small Street (for reasons that are obvious) but was renamed when parliament passed an act of law that expanded the representation of the people in the house of commons. The street dates from the 1300s and it is 50 meters long.
Claim To Fame: World’s oldest paved road
The Road to Giza is the world’s oldest known paved road. The road is over 4,600 years old and is six and a half feet wide. It covered a distance of seven and a half miles – connecting the quarries to the Southwest of Cairo, to the quay on Lake Moeris which connected to the Nile. The road was used to transport the enormous blocks of basalt to Giza where they were used for building (especially for paving).
Claim To Fame: World’s widest street
9 de Julio Avenue (meaning 9th of July Avenue – in honor of Argentina’s independence day) is the widest street in the world. It has six lanes in each direction and it spans an entire city block. There is a single building that sits on the Avenue (the former Ministry of Communications building) but there are many famous landmarks along the side – such as the old French Embassy, a statue of Don Quixote, and the famous obelisk (visible in the picture above) and Plaza de la República.
Claim To Fame: World’s crookedest street
Lombard Street in San Francisco is famous for its bizarre hair-pin turns. There are eight of the turns (called switchbacks) and the street is known as the “crookedest street in the world”. The turns were added because the street would have been too steep for most vehicles (though it would still be less steep than the street in item 1). The twisting section of Lombard Street is now one way – in order to make it safer and there is a parking ban in place.
Claim To Fame: World’s worst roundabout
Anyone who has been on the Internet for a while will recognize the Magic Roundabout – it has appeared in virtually every “funny picture” list you can find. The roundabout is a real roundabout in Swindon, England. It was built in 1972 and it includes 5 other smaller roundabouts. To make matters worse, you must travel anti-clockwise (the reverse of the normal situation on British roundabouts) when you enter the smaller central roundabout. The Swindon Junction has been voted the worst junction in Great Britain.
Claim To Fame: Only street in Britain where you must drive on the right
As most of our readers will know, the British drive on the left (unlike Europe and the United States). But there is one exception to this rule: Savoy Court is the only street in Britain where cars must legally drive on the right. Apparently this dates back to the old Hackney Cabs – by driving on the right, the driver was able to open the backdoor without leaving the cab, allowing the passengers to alight on the sidewalk. This is allowed by a special act of parliament.
Claim To Fame: Steepest street in the world
Baldwin Street in Dunedin, New Zealand boasts the steepest street. New Zealand has many cities built on or around mountainous and hilly areas, and Dunedin is no exception. This street (and many others in New Zealand) were designed by British town planners who had never been to the country. They simply overlaid a grid pattern on the map and had no idea that they had made impossible or ridiculous design choices. The slope on Baldwin street has a 35% grade. The road is so steep that at the top it is made of concrete because the usual road surfacing material used in New Zealand (asphalt) would slide down the street in hot weather.
Contributor: JFrater




























hey great list.. fascinated with the world's shortest street. ^^
I thought the shortest street was Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma-Gate in York?
You're right, lo, the list-writer shouldn't be expected to include basic information about these places. Scotland only has like 5 streets, so it should be easy to find Ebeneezer street there somewhere. Right? Christ. I was just saying it would have been nice is all.
5 streets? . . . thats not even remotley funny
She was being sarcastic you Banana.
Great list (again)- I have actually used the magic roundabout and even though i wasn’t driving and it was incredibly disorientating- although i still enjoyed it.
Thanks Bill. I never got a chance to try the Magic Roundabout – but I am not particularly sad about it to be honest
very nice list jaimie, more places to think of visiting
also the “overseas highway” from miami florida, USA to key west is quite a drive: 113 miles of roadway consisting of 42 bridges (one of them 7 miles long) between tiny islands, it feels like driving on the ocean. and triunfo/hatunrumiyoc in cusco, peru is a must walk for tourists there, taking you from the magnificent plaza de armas to the high views of the artsy san blas area while passing the famous 12-sided inca stone. it’s very cool to walk past buildings that join ancient and modern stone work in such a way.
I really don’t understand all the confusion about gravity hills :/ If it rolls one way then that way is downhill…simple! No magic spells or electromagnets..
What about Champs-Elysees in Paris… I think its pretty famous…
great list..that roundabout sure give me a headache just to see it…
Numbers 9 and 7 stretch the definition of “street” just a little bit.
Any prize for any List Universe member who can honestly claim to have travelled all of these? I claim 1 – there is a “Ghost Road” on Jeju Island, Korea.
I saw a photo of a house on a very steep street (?in San Francisco) which was tilted so that the street appeared flat and the house appeared tilted.
My ex visited New Zealand a couple of years back and had to opportunity to see Baldwin St. She told me that people get injured on it all the time attempting stupid stunts, which I wouldn’t doubt for a second.
astraya, you’ve travelled all these roads (at least in part?) kudos to you!
Go-betweens
Streets of your town
Round and round, up and down
Everyday I make my way
Through the streets of your town
Don’t the sun look good today?
But the rain is on it’s way
Watch the butcher shine his knives
And this town is full of battered wives.
Round and round, up and down
Everyday I make my way
Through the streets of your town
I ride your river under the bridge
I take your boat out to the reach
Cos I love that engine roar
But I still don’t hnow what I’m here for.
Round and round, up and down
Everyday I make my way
Through the streets of your town
They shut it down
They closed it down
They shut it down
They pulled it down.
England has the worst road system ever! I have to give all you Europeans credit for maneuvering those roundabouts… Every once in awhile you run into one in America, and we’re all pretty skittish about using them.
I was in Dunedin for a while and watched many people collapse half way up Baldwin St from their legs turning to jelly.
Ive been through both the pan american, and the san fran road.
I do have an issue with #10 though. A gravity hill is a rather common phenomena, which are found all over the world and are just complex optical illusions. This is mostly due to a concealed horizon, with which without, you cant judge what is really downhill.
Here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_hill
The one I have been to is “the mystery spot” in santa cruz, CA, USA and theres another one called “confusion hill” up the same 1 highway up the california coast.
.
Nonetheless, although there is little “mysterious” or “unique” about them, most are either free or extremely cheap to see, so why not right
lo – Sorry for confusing you. It doesn’t look a bit ambiguous. Quite the opposite, so I’ll try again: I claim a lowly score of one mark out of ten, being for travelling on a ghost road here in Korea.
Home town repping on number one!
Great to see that there.
Yeah alot of people walk it everyday.. Some dont make it to the top before deciding to turn around and walk back down.
Also a girl died trying to go down it in a wheelie bin (rubbish bin) a few years ago..=/
I don’t think that the street that is listed here is the narrowest, cause I was here: http://www.panoramio.com/photo/893069 , and it seemed much more narrow than the one in UK.. This one is located in the town of Vrbnik on the isle of Krk in Croatia, Europe. And it actually is a street. I just can’t remember the name…
This is a great list! That roundabout one is INSANE.
Cool list. If want a street which probably has the most horrific accidents to its name i would nominate the sheikh zayed road here in dubai. Ive seen cars upside down, upright, stuck between the guardrails of both lanes, smashed into cubes you name it. I drive down this road everyday and all these accidents could have been avoided if people could just keep in the speed limit which is enough to satisfy their accelerating need since its between 60 and 120 plus the radars doesnt catch you unless you go over 140.
astraya, i read it as “i claim 1″ -of the prizes! [and] there is a ghost road…
and i was getting jealous, too
can’t say i’ve been to any of jamie’s listed sites, only my two suggestions. i think i visited the street in san francisco when i was 10 and my family was there for the day, but i don’t truly remember it, so it doesn’t count.
what is the korean version of a “ghost road” anyway? a haunted road or something eerier?
What a great list!
I have have been fortunate enough to travel on Antioch, California’s gravity hill located on Empire Mine Rd. out in the country. What is weird is that the road is actually straight and not on a hill, but your car will move regardless. Just stop, put it in neutral and shut the engine off and it will start to roll at a steady pace all by itself. Pretty weird stuff.
I have also traveled to Frisco and I think that I have driven down that damn crooked road. I can’t be sure though. If it was not that road then it was one very similar because I remember being scared that the car I was driving would get stuck at the breech of one of the sharp curves. The streets in those cities are treacherous.
Thanks for the list, Jamie!
oh the speed limit is in km forgot to mention that
lo – The Korean “Ghost road” is a “gravity hill” as described in list item 10. On the same island is a “Mysterious road” which is another of exactly the same thing.
Ah, Baldwin Street…. I went up it once – never again! XD It sounds so much more interesting on the internet than it really is.
In Venice there are plenty of calle as wide as 60cm.
moreover: how can they tell the age of the Road to Giza? they can’t even tell the age of the pyramids…
24. astraya-
aahha. there are many “gravity roads” here in the states, and i assume everywhere. (which as JF and 5. foohy noted are normal roads that present an optical illusion.) a few of ours have developed reputations that the reason your car (bike, skate board, what-have-you) rolls “up-hill” or “for no reason, in neutral gear” is that it is being pushed by the ghostly hands of those who’ve died there in road accidents and want to spare you a similar fate. our most common version is the “ghost children” who will supposedly push a car over rail-road tracks where they suffered an untimely death in their school bus with an oncoming train. i’m assuming the korean lore is of a similar nature? sorry to mis-read your post
i do wish that you get the chance to visit all these places though.
Pretty cool. It would have been nice if you’d actually said where these streets are located (towns and cities etc.), but hey-ho, I’m nitpicking.
28. Lesbian Troubador-
is that not what google is for?
I was on the shortest medieval street in England, maybe even Europe. Not to mention the fact that it has a pretty hilarious name – Whip-ma-whop-ma-gate!! It’s in York. O’Connell Bridge in Dublin is one of the few bridges in a capital city that is almost square. It’s actually wider than it is longer (I know its not the same as a street but we don’t have many interesting streets, interesting-smelling streets yes, but not very interesting).
30. Lesbian Troubador-
hey, are you getting all sarcastic with me now? i’m just saying if you DO take the info jamie’s given in the list you really can find any info you want to know about it.
google: “world’s shortest street ebenezer place scotland”
and you do find all the internet has to offer about it. JF makes -or authorizes- a list/day and i think he assumes denizens of listverse are internet savvy enough to fill in most gaps. that said, details are never bad to have here. i like details too.
p.s.
#31 IS NOT ME, name grabbing again……
so sad
seriously, it’s early for moderation, but Lesbian Troubador it’s deeply sad to fake “apologies” here.
There is actually a street that is steeper than #1. Canton Avenue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania has a grade of 37%.
Ligeia (#32) – I’ve walked the length of ‘Whip-ma-whop-ma- gate” – It was once known as Whitnourwhatnourgate”: “Whit nour what nour” meaning “neither one thing, nor the other” in Anglo-Saxon. The more “modern” name is from the 13th Century or later and was originally a nickname because that was the location of the city pillory! It’s basically the length of the church that fronts it! About 30 metres – so the walk took me about 5 seconds!
However, a spectacular omission from this list is just off “Whip-ma-whop-ma-gate” and it is called “The SDhambles” – it’s the olkest ‘named’ street in Europe (and hence the world) and it’s name derives from a Viking term which was “Normandised” after 1066 and refers to the fact that the street was home to the city’s butchers and meat vendors where open-air butchery was performed and the offal tossed into the street.
Becuse the street was, by usage, filthy and unsavoury-looking; thus the term “a shambles” came to be used for something that was (or is) a mess.
“The Shambles” is one of the few streets mentioned by name in the Domesday Book.
At one point it is also so narrow that one can almost touch shops on either side simply by stretching out one’s arms.
wow, i went through 700+ comments on “evolution” and preserved my identity and it’s *****ing stolen on “streets”? unreal!
syn, mom424, can y’all fix this, please?
#39 is not me either….
and if #40 is sincere she’s been impersonated as well.
ARRGGH! this will lead to this being a registered ONLY site. why do people want to suck this way? “regular” trolling get to boring?
Muttley: I was on The Shambles (so many chocolate shops!!). I knew the thing about the butchers but didn’t know it was the oldest named street. I have a nice drawing of it and I’m trying to find a nice place to put it up in the office.
cyn, “too boring”
typos and you know what i meant….
40. Lesbian Troubad-
i actually like joy division too! but that’s neither here nor there- if some troll is trying to incite us to “fight” let’s stomp it out and vow “peace” until the IP/email address mods can sort this out. i underestimated the annoyingness of “faker” trolls…
peace
Where is the Bolivian Road of Death?
jfrater:
ANOTHER great list! Nice work!
I have personal experience with #4, and in a “roundabout” kind of way (snort) with #3. The former is a wonder, the latter a horror.
I wouldn’t ride/drive on it. Check it out: http://www.ssqq.com/ARCHIVE/vinlin27b.htm
Bravo. Great list. This moves into one of my top five fav lists on the website.
I love it when I learn so much from a list and then add a few of the highlighted points to my lists of places to see on future trips.
interesting places. the British people always have exceptions and funny laws…
oh and to impersonating troll “39. lo”
ee cummings was a recognized modern poet who chose to only use capitalization WHEN it was important. so if you think you can rip on my choice of the same in internet entertainment blog commentary well, you’re a moron. sorry, it’s true….
wow, i think #52 is our trolly friend again.
no one wants this to be a “registered only” site, wild comments can be fun stuff. but impersonating everybody? get a life! i refuse to believe jamie wrote that.
I have to say that I think I need to go visit these places. They look like loads of fun!
Great list, Jamie!
Concerning #10, I’ve been on this particular “gravity” street:
Blaine Township, Michigan (near Arcadia, Michigan): Putney Road, at the intersection with Joyfield Road.
We’ve tried the gravity trick on Putney Road on many occasions, and it’s a toss up whether it’s an optical illusion — because you really do look like you’re rolling uphill — or it really is a quirk. Done it with cars ranging from a little Geo Metro to a Ford Explorer. Same result each time.
ok mods, i finally registered (honestly didn’t know it was an option for a while) so now i see the “report abuse” tags, but they must be tied to posted commentor name, not hidden emails/ips, as i can’t “report” the fake “lo’s”. i know everyone has been dealing with this hijacking-of-sorts, but is there a way to change the way chosen “commentor names” tie to the addresses?
huhmm, i know you must find this 10 times more annoying than i do. i was just thrown by finding it on a list with such an innocuous topic, weird.
thanks for making my point crystal clear……
Great job!
I’ve been on two of those streets (nos. 8 and 5)! FYI it’s in Buenos Aires (most of the other streets have their home cities listed). And if you haven’t been to Buenos Aires, I highly recommend that you go
cleaning house now so some things will not be in sequence or seem in context.
craptastic way to start the day sweeping up trash
The shortest street reminded me: I once went inside the smallest house in Britain. It’s in Conwy, Wales, and it really is little. I think a “smallest” list would be fun! (As long as none of my body parts is mentioned)
as this list is getting “housecleaned’ my angry replies to “impersonating troll” no longer match up the comment numbers. so Lesbian Troubador please don’t think i meant your comment that now stands at #52 as the “bad” #52 or any such #misalignments, we saw the weirdness that this list fell prey to, lol! i have no hard feelings towards you at all.
thanks for “taking out the trash” mods
Magic Roundabout was my wife’s nickname in college
she also had very “Magnetic Hills” LOL
61. lo -
the reason i recommend either not using comment #s as reference or include # & commentor name. anytime you cite only the comment # you run the risk of appearing out of numerical sequence and i think its nicer to address someone by name.
as for spammers, trollz and other wastes of protein .. why do ya’ll even bother? your lives must be so meaningless. to waste your time posting a comment that gets taken out w/ the trash. seriously..posting lame or obscene comments. posing as someone else because you are such a cowardly loser…
why?
get off line and go out into the world. enjoy the day.
better yet…..go play in traffic!
The Russian Highway from Hell (http://www.ssqq.com/ARCHIVE/vinlin27c.htm)
The Bolivian Road of Death (http://www.ssqq.com/ARCHIVE/vinlin27b.htm)
China – The Guoliang Tunnel (http://www.ssqq.com/ARCHIVE/vinlin27a.htm)
All of these are very interesting as well.
These are great streets! I’ve been to San Fran and on the crookedest street. That was interesting.
That street in New Zealand would be terrible to live on. Wow! :O