QOTD: Potholes, Dips, and Craters - Oh My!

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Our roads are a mess. It doesn’t seem to matter where in America (or Canada) one travels, there stands a very good chance that one will find crumbling infrastructure. In fact, the United States ranks eighth in the world in national infrastructure quality, behind Germany and the U.K., but above France and Canada, according to one recent study. Some days, it sure seems worse than that.

Which leads us to today’s question: what’s the worst road in your neck of the woods?

We don’t mean the most dangerous roads. Those are terrible, too, but often earn their badge through some combination of poor design and bad traffic patterns. No, what we mean in this post are the roads most likely to shoot a strut right through the hood of your car.

Back in June, Business Insider ranked a few states in terms of their appalling road conditions. New York was ranked eighth, laying claim to 114,365 miles of public road, 28 percent of them rated as being in poor condition. Heavy traffic (both in terms of weight and volume) combined with winter conditions that promote tarmac-warping freeze/thaw cycles all conspire to scupper the pavement in New York.

As a percentage, the same study reported that Washington, D.C. has the country’s worst roads, with a shocking 95 percent of the district’s 1,507 miles of public roads being classified as “poor.” As a function of basic math, small states which have a relatively low total mileage of public roads fared poorly in terms of a percentage.

Leading the way in terms of total miles of cratered pavement is California, no surprise for anyone who’s plied roads in the Golden State. About half of the state’s roads, which total nearly 200,000 miles worth, are said to be in poor condition, according to that same report.

What’s the worst road near your home? We’re sure there’s plenty of them.

Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

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  • Sector 5 Sector 5 on Jan 22, 2018

    Where's that classic Citroen suspension? If only tojo could do it cheap & reliable.

  • APaGttH APaGttH on Jan 22, 2018

    Just about any non-arterial street in downtown Seattle, Belltown, South Lake Union, and Queen Anne is a complete $h1t show. It's a crater field of ruts, bumps, and metal plates from the endless construction. Heavy equipment and trucks have buckled the pavement, the city has no motivation to repave while massive construction is going on, and some of these streets truly resemble the roadways of Managua or Granada, Nicaragua. Roads are also covered in construction barriers and portable no-parking signs that investigation after investigation shows that construction companies are abusing to secure free parking for themselves. In many places outside of arterials, they are barely 2 lanes wide. I hate driving down there.

    • Dal20402 Dal20402 on Jan 23, 2018

      Eh. After dating a Baltimore girl for a while and doing the attendant driving in that city, I can't get exercised about anything I've seen anywhere in Seattle, South Lake Union chaos included.

  • Bd2 Would be sweet on a Telluride.
  • Luke42 When will they release a Gladiator 4xe?I don’t care what color it is, but I do care about being able to plug it in.
  • Bd2 As I have posited here numerous times; the Hyundai Pony Coupe of 1974 was the most influential sports and, later on, supercar template. This Toyota is a prime example of Hyundai's primal influence upon the design industry. Just look at the years, 1976 > 1974, so the numbers bear Hyundai out and this Toyota is the copy.
  • MaintenanceCosts Two of my four cars currently have tires that have remaining tread life but 2017 date codes. Time for a tire-stravaganza pretty soon.
  • Lorenzo I'd actually buy another Ford, if they'd bring back the butternut-squash color. Well, they actually called it sea foam green, but some cars had more green than others, and my 1968 Mercury Montego MX was one of the more-yellow, less-green models. The police always wrote 'yellow' on the ticket.
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