

Authorities feared that it if leaned too much, the street might become so narrow that humans will no longer be able to use it. In 2007 it entered into the Guinness Book of Records as the world's narrowest street.Īt one point the near-derelict half-timbered house (the one on the left on the photo above) started to lean making the street even narrower.

In 1820, a town hall administrator decided to elevate the status of this particular gap to that of a full-fledged public street. The alley was built in 1727 during the reconstruction efforts after the area was completely destroyed in the massive city-wide fire of 1726. Photo credit (Left), Photo credit (Right) Some locals are known to humorously refer to the Spreuerhofstrasse as a benchmark measurement for their diets. Anyone over 1.8 meters tall have to bend to pass through. Although a ton of tourists from Asia and America flock to inspect the alley, visitors aren’t necessarily encouraged to squeeze through the crack because there is a good possibility of them getting stuck. In order to use the street one has to squeeze past two blank walls, and when it's raining, water drips from the gutter of an old half-timbered house on one side. There’s not much to see in Spreuerhofstrasse, and it isn’t particularly pretty either. But since it is located on municipal land, the folks of Reutlingen insist it’s a public street. The street isn’t particularly long either - just 3.8 meters. The “street” is only 31 centimeters wide at its narrowest point and 40 centimeters wide on the average. It is actually a narrow alley, called Spreuerhofstraße, between two closely built houses. At what point does a street cease to be a street? According to the Guinness Book of Records, the narrowest street in the world is located in the old town of Reutlingen, in Germany.
