Getting stuck in traffic jams can ruin your day! Most of us have been stuck in some bad ones over the years but were they as bad as these?
Check out some of the worst ones of all time.
Check out some of the worst ones of all time.
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Gurugram, India India's industrial hub witnessed a jam extending up to 12 miles (19.3 km) in July 2016 due to heavy rain which led to massive waterlogging. Commuters were stuck for over 12 hours in the traffic snarl. © Parveen Kumar/Hindustan Times via Getty Images |
Brebes, Indonesia This 13-mile (21 km) long traffic jam lasted three days and killed 12 people. It happened in July 2016 at a major highway junction in Brebes, a town on the Indonesia island of Java. The entire stretch was choked with thousands of people headed home to celebrate Eid al-Fitr. © Anadolu Agency/Getty Images |
Beijing-Hong Kong-Macau Expressway, China Another holiday season disaster, thousands of motorists were stuck on the Beijing-Hong Kong-Macau Expressway in October 2015 thanks to a new checkpoint that reportedly caused 50 lanes to merge into 20. The 62-mile (100-km) traffic jam lasted for 12 days. © Fu Ding/Fazhiwanbao/VCG via Getty Images |
São Paulo, Brazil The city, which was hosting several Brazil World Cup games, came to a standstill due to a 214-mile (344 km) traffic jam in June 2014. The transportation problem was compounded by huge protests and incomplete projects. © NELSON ALMEIDA/AFP/Getty Images |
São Paulo, Brazil Rush-hour traffic is a common sight in most major cities of the world. Some of those cities, like São Paulo, Brazil, are so used to long traffic jams that commuters even take the opportunity to watch movies on the go. But even by their standards the jam in November 2013 was a terrible one – it happened on the day before a public holiday weekend and the jam was 192 miles long. (Pictured): Congested transit on 23 de Maio avenue in São Paulo, Brazil. © Levi Bianco/Flickr Vision/Getty Images |
Moscow, Russia This 125-mile (201-km) traffic jam went on for three days after a major highway between Moscow and St. Petersburg was buried due to a snowstorm in November 2012. (Pictured): A jam builds up on a road next to the Kremlin, in Moscow, Russia, on January 25, 2012. © Harry Engels/Getty Images |
Chicago, Illinois, US Over 20 inches (51 cm) of snowfall in Chicago in February 2011 during rush hour was responsible for a massive 12-hour traffic jam in which many cars were almost completely buried. © Kiichiro Sato/AP Images |
New York, US After the terrorist attack on the World Trade Tower, traffic across New York City came to a halt. The gridlock went on for a few days, with bridges and tunnels closed to everyone except emergency vehicles. © Spencer Platt/Getty Images |
Beijing, China In August 2010, commuters on the Beijing-Tibet expressway found themselves stuck in a 62-mile (100 km) jam that lasted for 12 days! If you think the jam was caused by weather conditions or some sort of disaster, you’re wrong – it was just caused by too many cars on the road. (Pictured): Cars seen in heavy traffic on one of Beijing's major ring roads on September 2, 2010. © Peter Parks/AFP/Getty Images |
Houston, Texas, US With news that Hurricane Rita – a Category 5 storm that would eventually cause damage worth billions of dollars – was fast approaching, as many as 2.5 million people were evacuating Houston, Texas, U.S., in September 2005. The rush led to a jam that stretched for 100 miles (161 km) and lasted for 48 hours. © Dave Einsel/Getty Images |
Tokyo, Japan There was complete chaos on August 1990, due to two reasons – a city-wide evacuation sparked by a typhoon warning and, strangely, large numbers of people returning home from holidays. The result was a jam involving over 15,000 cars spread over the 84 miles (135 km) between the Hyogo and Shiga prefectures in western Japan. © ullstein bild via Getty Images |
East/West Germany In April 1990, the tearing down of the Berlin Wall between East and West Germany led to a surge of people eager to cross into the other side of the city and meet family and friends. That led to an estimated 18 million cars occupying space designed for 500,000. The result, predictably, was a jam that was about 30 miles (48 km) long. © ullstein bild via Getty Images |
Lyon-Paris, France This jam was caused due to extreme weather conditions, forcing large numbers of Paris residents traveling from Lyon to get caught in a 109-mile (175 km) long queue in February 1980. (Pictured): A traffic jam at La Concorde Square, in Paris, France. © Francois Le Diascorn/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images |
New York, US The organizers of a Jimi Hendrix performance at the now-iconic Woodstock music festival in 1969 expected 50,000 people to show up. Instead, nearly a million people came, causing a three-day jam of the New York Thruway that stretched for 20 miles. It became so bad that some of the performers were ferried by helicopters and some of the fans simply abandoned their cars, choosing to walk the rest of the way. Eventually, 500,000 made it through. © Hulton Archive/Getty Images |
Hainan, China Over 10,000 cars were stuck in a massive traffic jam in February 2018 which took place at the end of China's seven-day holiday to celebrate Lunar New Year. The huge queue reportedly stretched for around 6.2 miles and was caused by heavy fog over Qiongzhou Strait in Haikou. © VCG/VCG via Getty Images |
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