Anyone that likes to drive has a favorite road. For some, it's a coastal road complete with stunning views and a cool sea breeze. For others, it's a winding forest road permeated with greenery. And for others still, it's a fast jaunt through the hills. Regardless of personal favorites, however, there are some roads in the world that just beg to be driven on. Here are 17 roads you should definitely check out!   The 2,429-meter-high Furka Pass is a high mountain pass in the Swiss Alps connecting Gletsch, Valais with Realp, Uri. The Furka Pass was used as a location in the James Bond movie Goldfinger.  The Transfăgărășan or DN7C is the second-highest paved road in Romania. Built as a strategic military route, the 90 km of twists and turns run north to south across the tallest sections of the Southern Carpathians, between the highest peak in the country, Moldoveanu, and the second highest, Negoiu. The road connects the historic regions of Transylvania and Wallachia and the cities of Sibiu and Pitești. The road climbs to 2,034 meters in altitude. The most spectacular route is from the north. It is a winding road, dotted with steep hairpin turns, long S-curves, and sharp descents. Former Top Gear host, Jeremy Clarkson, had said about Transfăgărășan that, "this is the best road… in the world" – a title the program's presenters had previously given to the Stelvio Pass in Italy. Trollstigen (English: Trolls' Ladder) is a serpentine mountain road in Rauma, Norway, part of Norwegian National Road 63 connecting Åndalsnes in Rauma and Valldal in Norddal. It is a popular tourist attraction due to its steep incline of 9% and 11 hairpin bends up a steep mountainside. Trollstigen was opened on July 31st, 1936, by King Haakon VII after eight years of construction. During peak tourist season, about 2,500 vehicles journey along the road each day. The road is narrow with many sharp bends, and although several bends have been widened between 2005 and 2012, vehicles over 12.4 meters long are prohibited from using the road. At the 700-meter plateau, there is a car park and several viewing balconies overlooking the bends and the Stigfossen waterfall. Trollstigen is closed during autumn and winter. A normal opening season stretches from mid-May to October, but can sometimes be shorter or longer due to changes in weather conditions. |
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