#10: U Bein Bridge – Myanmar
Sunsets here are unforgettable. The U Bein Bridge, made from ancient teakwood, stretches nearly a mile across Taungthaman Lake in Amarapura, its silhouette etched in orange and gold each evening. But beneath the romantic imagery lies real fragility. Built in the 1850s, it’s now a creaking relic, worn thin by millions of barefoot footsteps and seasonal floods.

No railings. No repairs worthy of its age. Locals and tourists alike still cross, some even biking across the narrowing planks. It’s beautiful—hauntingly so—but each trip across is a gamble, a whisper of history paired with the ever-present groan of age beneath your feet.
