Yungas Road
The Yungas Road is a cycle route about 60 km long which links the city of La Paz and the Yungas region of Bolivia. It draws about 25,000 tourists per year[1] and is a major La Paz tourist attraction.[2] Many tour operators cater to downhill mountain biking, providing information, guides, transport and equipment. At least 18 cyclists have died on the road since 1998.[1] The tourist route is a 64-km-long road with 3500 metres of descent.[3]
The route includes the Cotapata-Santa Bárbara section. It replaced the old road, built in 1930. It was considered dangerous[1] because of its steep slopes, narrow single track, lack of guardrails, rain, and fog, and was nicknamed the "Road of Death". However, it was not the most dangerous road in the region.[4] Unlike the rest of the country, traffic was left-hand, to allow the driver to assess the distance of their outer wheel from the edge of the road.[5]
A new alternative route was built during a 20-year period ending in 2006. The modernization included enlarging the carriageway from one to two lanes; asphalt paving; bridges, drainage, guardrails, and the building of a new section between Chusquipata and Yolosa, bypassing the most dangerous sections of the original road.
Gallery
- Yungas Road
- The Old Yungas Road before the new road had been opened.
- Tourists downhill mountain biking
References
- Geoghegan, Tom (16 May 2010). "Cycling the world's most dangerous road". BBC News Online. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
- "Death Road Tours". Bolivia Hop. Retrieved 4 April 2019.
- "Death Road / Itinerary". Barracuda Biking. Retrieved 4 April 2019.
- Villa, Micaela. "Se reducen los accidentes en las carreteras paceñas". La Razón. Retrieved 4 April 2019.
- "North Yungas Road - Bolivia's Most Treacherous Road". worldatlas. Retrieved 24 April 2019.
External links
- Media related to Yungas Road at Wikimedia Commons