World's steepest streets, in the UK and beyond

Lofty lanes

<p>Claudio Divizia/Shutterstock</p>

Claudio Divizia/Shutterstock

What sets one street apart from the next? A standout building, perhaps, some colourful street art or a picturesque, leafy boulevard vibe. These may make a road memorable, but few things make you notice a street more than slogging up or teetering down sidewalks at extremely sharp angles. We’ve pulled together a list of some of the world’s steepest streets where residents live life on the edge, from vertiginous city-centre thoroughfares to little-visited cliffside tracks.

With lofty ambitions and super-sharp gradients, read on to discover some of the steepest streets in the world...

Steep Hill, Lincoln, England, UK

<p>DanieleC/Alamy</p>

DanieleC/Alamy

There are steeper streets to come (this stretch of Lincoln city centre has a gradient of around 29%, which is imposing but not world-beating), but how could we ignore a street quite literally called 'Steep Hill'? This cobbled thoroughfare is found in the capital of the English county of Lincolnshire, and rewards steadfast walkers by finishing at the magnificent Lincoln Cathedral and Lincoln Castle.

If you'd rather save your legs for the sites, the Steep Hill Shuttle chugs up the hill throughout the day from Monday to Saturday.

Steep Hill, Lincoln, England, UK

<p>Electric Egg/Shutterstock</p>

Electric Egg/Shutterstock

Most ultra-steep roads are found in residential neighbourhoods, where only a few hardy homeowners take the climb each day, but Steep Hill is a local hub with a range of retail outlets and amenities and impressive footfall.

The historic street is filled with boutique stores, low-ceilinged tearooms and cosy chocolate shops, and boasts a 12th-century cottage and an old Roman gate. In 2012, the Academy of Urbanism voted Steep Hill Britain's best street.

Lombard Street, San Francisco, California, USA

<p>Nick Starichenko/Shutterstock</p>

Nick Starichenko/Shutterstock

One of San Francisco’s most famous streets, Lombard Street serves up twisting switchbacks and pretty postcard views. The zig-zag route stretches for just one block in the Russian Hill neighbourhood – but its eight hairpin turns make it one of the most crooked streets in the world.

When it was constructed back in 1922, the curved road was intended to reduce the hill’s natural 27% grade, which was too steep for most vehicles to manage. Today it sees around 250 vehicles per hour, and receives around two million visitors a year.

Lombard Street, San Francisco, California, USA

<p>Andrew Zarivny/Shutterstock</p>

Andrew Zarivny/Shutterstock

Named after Lombard Street in Philadelphia, the red-brick road is one-way, with traffic flowing downhill only. Signs at the top mandate a speed limit of five miles per hour (8km/h) and during busy times drivers have to wait up to 20 minutes to get onto the street's crooked stones.

Tourists jamming the street can be a real problem for residents, who struggle to get into their own driveways. To help ease congestion, the local transportation authority has considered charging tourists to drive down the renowned road.

Vale Street, Bristol, England, UK

<p>PA Images/Alamy</p>

PA Images/Alamy

England is not short of mountains and hills, so it’s perhaps no wonder that some of its residents live on drastic inclines. The country’s steepest street is located in Bristol. Bordered by 19th-century terraced houses, Vale Street has an almost 40% gradient through its steepest section.

It’s so deeply slanted, in fact, that cars have to park diagonally to avoid rolling down the hill. In winter, ice makes it even more treacherous, with some residents reportedly tying their cars to lamposts.

 

Vale Street, Bristol, England, UK

<p>Matthew Horwood/Getty Images</p>

Matthew Horwood/Getty Images

The sloping street, which has a staircase for pedestrians built into the concrete, was famously visited by street artist Banksy in 2020. He left a mural depicting a woman sneezing so hard that her false teeth have fallen out. The artwork, named Aachoo!!, has since been removed from the house by crane.

Every Easter, Vale Street is closed to traffic for an annual egg-rolling contest, in which residents take turns to roll hard-boiled eggs down the slope in a bid to get theirs the furthest.

Filbert Street, San Francisco, California, USA

<p>travellight/Shutterstock</p>

travellight/Shutterstock

If it wasn't already known for its vertiginous slope, Filbert Street was put on the map by US TV host David Letterman during a visit to San Francisco in 1996. Surrounded by a cheering crowd, Letterman released hundreds of watermelons and balls down the block as part of his late night show. The act cemented Filbert Street’s fame – the hill, which descends 65 feet (20m) and has a maximum grade of just over 31%, would be nicknamed 'Watermelon Hill'.

Filbert Street, San Francisco, California, USA

<p>canadastock/Shutterstock</p>

canadastock/Shutterstock

Visit today and you’re unlikely to spot rolling watermelons. The street – which runs east to west on the northern side of San Francisco – is great for pedestrians, turning into a series of car-free pavements and walkways as it approaches the bay. These include the Filbert Street Steps, which run through the Grace Marchant Garden and descend through a scenic stretch too steep for roads.

Glance up and you might spot some of the street’s other residents – a flock of wild parrots.

 

Constitution Hill, Swansea, Wales, UK

<p>Bil Hinton/Shutterstock</p>

Bil Hinton/Shutterstock

With a gradient of 20%, or one in five, Constitution Hill is one of the steepest residential roads in the UK. The height difference between the top and bottom of Constitution Hill is said to be 184 feet (56m). While there are usually padlocked black posts stopping cars driving up it, it is fine for cyclists to have a go, despite the fact that it’s still cobbled.

In the late 19th century, the Swansea Constitution Hill Incline Railway began to operate up and down this hill.

 

Constitution Hill, Swansea, Wales, UK

<p>KBImages/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

KBImages/Alamy Stock Photo

Although it’s only 984 feet (300m) long, Constitution Hill has become something of a Swansea landmark. It has featured in national cycling races like the Milk Race and Tour of Britain, as well as the 1997 movie Twin Town.

Fans of the film will remember the iconic opening scene in which protagonists Julian (Llŷr Ifans) and Jeremy Lewis (Rhys Ifans) joyride at high-speed through Cromwell Street onto Constitution Hill.

Baxter Street, Los Angeles, California, USA

<p>Oleg Shpyrko/CC BY 2.0 DEED/Flickr</p>

Oleg Shpyrko/CC BY 2.0 DEED/Flickr

For a spot of white-knuckle driving in Los Angeles, Baxter Street has you covered. Buses, fire trucks and other long vehicles occasionally find themselves getting stuck at the top of this road in LA’s Echo Park neighbourhood. And no wonder – the road, namely the stretch between Allessandro and Alvarado, claims a 32% grade.

Its steepness draws thrill-seeking skateboarders and cyclists who bomb down the street for YouTube kudos. In 2018, Baxter became a one-way street, helping to cut down on vehicle accidents.

Baxter Street, Los Angeles, California, USA

<p>Associated Press/Alamy</p>

Associated Press/Alamy

One of the steepest roads in the city, Baxter Street came about in 1872, when surveyors imposed a grid system on hilly terrain. The street later became a testing ground for cars, as manufacturers staged impressive stunts to show off their vehicles’ power. In 1916, a four-wheel-drive truck, heaving with baled hay, groaned its way up the hill, stopping twice for the press to take photos.

Baxter Street continues to intimidate drivers to this day, and some locals avoid the road in wet weather.

Stalheimskleiva, Vestland County, Norway

<p>Bjoern Windorf/Shutterstock</p>

Bjoern Windorf/Shutterstock

Dubbed ‘the road between the waterfalls’, the 170-year-old Stalheimskleiva is usually impassable from late October until June or July due to snow and ice. Located a few miles north of Voss in western Norway, the serpentine mountain road is 1.18 miles (1.9km) long, is completely paved and runs east-west, from Nærøydalsvegen 351 road to Stalheimsvegen 132 road.

There are a total of 13 hairpin bends along its route, and you can experience magnificent views of the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Nærøydalen valley.

Stalheimskleiva, Vestland County, Norway

<p>Bjoern Windorf/Shutterstock</p>

Bjoern Windorf/Shutterstock

Stalheimskleiva was constructed by manual labour between 1842 and 1846, involving around 1,000 men, with its initial purpose to improve the postal route between Oslo and Bergen. Previously accommodating traffic in both directions, it is now permanently closed for all motorised vehicles, but opened for pedestrians and bicycles.

The road is considered one of the steepest roads in northern Europe, with a maximum gradient of 20% through some of the ramps, and an elevation gain of 800 feet (244m).

Canton Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

<p>James Hackland/Alamy</p>

James Hackland/Alamy

It may be short in length, but what it lacks in distance Canton Avenue certainly makes up for in steepness. Located in the Beechview neighbourhood a couple of miles south of downtown Pittsburgh, this 600-foot-long (183m) cobbled slope has an average grade of 30% over its length, adding heft to its claim to be the steepest street in the US.

One short section even has a grade of 37%. There is no flat ground at the bottom, so traffic is only allowed to go one way up the hill.

Canton Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

<p>jefftakespics2/Shutterstock</p>

jefftakespics2/Shutterstock

Pittsburgh is known for its up-and-down terrain, and Canton Avenue often attracts daring cyclists looking to push their limits. The paved street plays a starring role in Pittsburgh’s annual Dirty Dozen bike race, where participants race for 50 miles (80km) over 13 of the city's steepest hills.

Pedalling to the top of this summit is a huge feat, particularly with tricky cobbles beneath your wheels. The street is lined with houses, but residents don’t park on the precipitous slope – there is a car park at the top of the hill.

Ffordd Pen Llech, Harlech, Wales, UK

<p>Paul Quayle/Alamy</p>

Paul Quayle/Alamy

A meandering street in the picturesque town of Harlech was crowned by the Guinness Book of World Records as the world’s steepest in 2019, credited with a gradient of 37.5% through its steepest stretch. But a surveyor from Baldwin Street in New Zealand, a rival for the title, then visited the Welsh town on a fact-finding mission.

He made the case that the best way to measure a street’s gradient was from the centreline rather than at any point along the sides. Guinness agreed and knocked Ffordd Pen Llech’s gradient down to a mere 28.6%.

Ffordd Pen Llech, Harlech, Wales, UK

<p>Andrew Chisholm/Shutterstock</p>

Andrew Chisholm/Shutterstock

Still, the road continues to challenge even the fittest hikers and cyclists. As well as its steep street, Harlech is best known for its medieval castle and the uplifting anthem Men of Harlech, which describes the events of a seven-year siege of the castle between 1461 and 1468.

Centuries on, its residents battled equally bravely for the steepest street record. Gwyn Headley, who led the campaign to claim the title, said that the demotion by Guinness left him "blinking back the tears".

Eldred Street, Los Angeles, California, USA

<p>Google Street View</p>

Google Street View

Eldred Street, in the Highland Park neighbourhood of Los Angeles, is the city's steepest drivable street. It rockets to a 33% grade at its topmost end, climbing 219 feet (67m) in altitude. They don’t make streets like this anymore in LA.

Named after Delos W Eldred, who owned a property here around the turn of the 20th century, Eldred Street was built in 1912, well before city officials mandated that no street should have a grade greater than 15%.

Eldred Street, Los Angeles, California, USA

<p>Google Street View</p>

Google Street View

Living on Eldred Street presents some interesting challenges for residents. A number of cars have rolled and flipped their way down the road over the years, and, once parked, gravity can make it difficult to open car doors. The gradient is so sheer that the street has its own small-sized rubbish trucks, as normal-sized models would likely tip over when trying to turn around at the top of the street.

Mail is not delivered to houses but to a group mailbox situated at the bottom of the hill.

Baldwin Street, Dunedin, New Zealand

<p>Pauline Mongarny/Shutterstock</p>

Pauline Mongarny/Shutterstock

This stretch of tarmac, located in Dunedin on New Zealand’s South Island, is officially the world’s steepest street. It held the record for more than a decade until June 2019 when Ffordd Pen Llech in Wales clinched the title. Baldwin Street residents appealed and, after a review, the street was reinstated as the world’s steepest in 2020 – with a staggering 35% gradient.

The appeal resulted in the Guinness Book of World Records updating its rules on measuring inclines – now a street’s gradient must be measured using the centreline of the road.

Baldwin Street, Dunedin, New Zealand

<p>Sahara Prince/Shutterstock</p>

Sahara Prince/Shutterstock

The reason for Dunedin’s steepness goes back to when the city was first planned. Urban designers from the UK opted for a grid system with no regard for topography – hence the steep, straight roads you find today. Baldwin Street, which runs to a dead end at Signal Hill, is now popular with tourists visiting the South Island.

It has also hosted several bizarre events, including the Baldwin Street Gut Buster where participants had to race up to the top of the road and back. The record is one minute and 56 seconds.

Shipquay Street, Londonderry, Northern Ireland, UK

<p>Hazel Plater/Shutterstock</p>

Hazel Plater/Shutterstock

It is said that Shipquay Street is the steepest shopping thoroughfare on the isle of Ireland, if not the whole of Europe. In 2014, a slide running the entire length of the street turned it into a massive three-lane water adventure as part of a fundraiser organised by Cancer Research UK. Try saying the tongue-twister 'Shipquay Street is a slippery street to slide on'.

Shipquay Street, Londonderry, Northern Ireland, UK

<p>Greg Balfour Evans/Alamy Stock Photo</p>

Greg Balfour Evans/Alamy Stock Photo

Shipquay Street is about 984 feet (300m) long, on a steep slope, from the war memorial in the Diamond, down to the Guildhall. It is one of Londonderry's shopping, arts and social centres and home to several shops and bars including The River Inn – the oldest public house in the city.

Apparently, there has been a hostelry on that particular site since the 17th century.

Bradford Street, San Francisco, California, USA

<p>Erica Fischer/CC BY 2.0 DEED/Flickr</p>

Erica Fischer/CC BY 2.0 DEED/Flickr

San Francisco is notorious for its hills – there are 48 with names, and arguably many more without. Depending on your definition of 'hill' and where you set the city limits, some say there are 70, 80 or more. One thing’s for sure – Bradford Street in the Bernal Heights neighbourhood hosts the city's steepest stretch of road, specifically the portion just above Tompkins Avenue.

It climbs steadily at a 24% grade – fairly typical for San Francisco – before exploding into a 30-foot (9m) stretch with a 41% grade.

Bradford Street, San Francisco, California, USA

<p>Erica Fischer/CC BY 2.0 DEED/Flickr</p>

Erica Fischer/CC BY 2.0 DEED/Flickr

Climbing to the top of this street is no mean feat. In 2010, computer scientist Stephen Von Worley calculated that, on such a slope, gravity alone could accelerate a one-tonne vehicle from zero to 60 in just 7.2 seconds. Scaling the mound on foot is tough too – but locals say that the views are worth the effort.

The crest of the hill rewards locals and tourists with a sumptuous span of the San Francisco skyline.

Gold Hill, Shaftesbury, Dorset, UK

<p>John Gilham/Shutterstock</p>

John Gilham/Shutterstock

Although you might not have heard of it, many will instantly recognise Gold Hill in Shaftesbury. This street in the heart of the Dorset countryside was made famous when it became the setting for Ridley Scott's much-loved 1973 Hovis TV advert that featured a bread delivery boy pushing his bike up the steep ancient cobbled hill.

The street was also previously used as a TV location in 1967 for John Schlesinger's adaptation of Far From The Madding Crowd, and revisited for another TV advert, for supermarket chain Morrisons.

Gold Hill, Shaftesbury, Dorset, UK

<p>P Cartwright/Shutterstock</p>

P Cartwright/Shutterstock

Lined with chocolate-box cottages and beautiful cobbles, the 656-foot-long (200m) Gold Hill, aka ‘Hovis Hill’, offers a panoramic view of the small town, which only has 9,000 residents, below. At the top of the street is the 14th-century St Peter's Church and Gold Hill Museum, and Gold Hill runs beside the Grade I-Listed walls of Shaftesbury Abbey, which dates back to the 1360s when it was built by King Alfred the Great.

Waipio Valley Road, Hawaii, USA

<p>Mark van Dam/Shutterstock</p>

Mark van Dam/Shutterstock

OK, so it’s not technically a residential street, but this rough-and-ready highway in Hawaii reportedly cranks up to an eye-watering 40% gradient or even more in places, so we couldn’t leave it off our list. Located on Hawaii’s Big Island, the super-steep strip of tarmac snakes for 1.4 miles (2.3km) through lush scenery, connecting Waipio Overlook with the Waipio Valley below.

It’s so steep – the steepest road of its length in the United States – that it can ruin car brakes on the way down.

Waipio Valley Road, Hawaii, USA

<p>glenrichardphoto/Shutterstock</p>

glenrichardphoto/Shutterstock

The narrow road is only accessible to four-wheel-drive vehicles and it’s considered so dangerous that many car rental companies prohibit travelling on it. Waipio – which translates as ‘curved water’ in the Hawaiian language – isn’t currently accessible to the general public.

In 2022, it was closed due to rockfall, deteriorating road conditions and other health and safety concerns. It’s now limited to residents and certain tour companies, although the county is working on a three-year, $6 million (£4.7m) project to make the road safer.

Blake Street, Sheffield, UK

<p>Terry Robinson/Wikimedia Commons</p>

Terry Robinson/Wikimedia Commons

Sheffield is famous for its hills, but no street in the Steel City is steeper than Blake Street. This road in the Upperthorpe area, 1.2 miles (2km) west of the city centre, has around 656 feet (200m) of steep striding, at a gradient of 16.6 degrees. That’s five degrees more than Jenkin Road in Wincobank, which featured as one of the toughest sections of the 2014 Tour de France Grand Départ route through Yorkshire.

Blake Street, Sheffield, UK

<p>Terry Robinson/Wikimedia Commons</p>

Terry Robinson/Wikimedia Commons

There are grips built into the concrete paving stones of Blake Street to help those making their way up or down the incline. And for those who have the mettle to get to the top of the Steel City’s steepest street, they are rewarded with the Blake Hotel, the entrance to Ruskin Park, and majestic views across the city.

Blake Street was featured in the iconic 1997 film The Full Monty, and every festive season, the residents don Father Christmas costumes and run a Santa Dash up the street.

Malga Palazzo/Salita Scanuppia, Besenello, Trentino, Italy

<p>Niccolò Caranti/Wikimedia Commons</p>

Niccolò Caranti/Wikimedia Commons

Tucked away in the Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol region of the Dolomite mountain range in the northern part of Italy, the Va della Posta Vecchia is said to be the steepest and hardest long climb on a sealed-surface road in Europe, if not the world. Also known as Salita Scanuppia, Malga Palazzo follows a road built in the 16th century.

Starting at Besenello, the ascent is about 4.97 miles (8km), while the elevation gain is 4,320 feet (1,317m). The average gradient is 18.1%, although it hits 42.8% through some of the ramps.

Malga Palazzo/Salita Scanuppia, Besenello, Trentino, Italy

<p>Niccolò Caranti/Wikimedia Commons</p>

Niccolò Caranti/Wikimedia Commons

While the road is paved with concrete, what makes Malga Palazzo even more difficult for cyclists is that much of the surface is not even. It is ‘wavy’, with very wide ripples in its surface, intended to provide better traction when there is snow or ice. If you speak to cyclists who have visited the area, you’ll hear many stories about people trying to ride up Scanuppia and falling off their bikes.

Gardner Street, Partick, Glasgow, UK

<p>Claudio Divizia/Shutterstock</p>

Claudio Divizia/Shutterstock

It is arguably the most photographed street in Glasgow's West End, with many residents of the ‘dear green place’ telling stories about cycling down from Partickhill and down Gardner Street, past the church, towards busy Dumbarton Road.

The Glasgow Warriors rugby team made use of the street's steep 8.03% gradient to put on a strength and conditioning session as part of their training. You’ll even find the odd snowboarder or skier on the street around winter time.

Gardner Street, Partick, Glasgow, UK

<p>Stanislavskyi/Shutterstock</p>

Stanislavskyi/Shutterstock

The reason for the road’s steepness is geological and dates back almost 30,000 years. Glasgow lies in a drumlin (small, teardrop-shaped hills formed by glaciers) field, which extends from the Kilpatrick Hills south of Loch Lomond to just beyond Shettleston in the East End.

By 1901, Glasgow's population was 10 times what it had been in a century earlier and, given Partick's position around the city's shipyards, the population of the borough boomed, meaning even locations as impractical as Gardner Street were used for building tenements.

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