 | 11 foot 8 Bridge | Try driving a truck under this bridge in North Carolina. Actually, please don't. |
 | 33 Thomas Street | A windowless skyscraper in New York. Not suspicious at all. |
 | A Mountain | Also known as Sentinel Peak, this hill in Tucson, Arizona literally has a big letter "A" on it. |
 | Agloe, New York | A fictional town in New York. |
 | Aroma of Tacoma | "What an incredible smell you've discovered" could have been this Washington city's motto. |
 | Badlands Guardian | A natural topographic feature in Alberta, Canada, which, when viewed from above, looks remarkably like a human wearing a Native American headdress and earbuds. |
 | Beatosu and Goblu | Two non-existent Ohio towns that appeared on Michigan's official highway map as a reference to the University of Michigan and their rivals, Ohio State University. |
 | Bubbly Creek | The branch of the Chicago River that was so contaminated with blood from the Stock Yards that it gained this appetizing moniker. |
 | Bullfrog County, Nevada | A former county in Nevada established around a mountain which was to become a radioactive waste disposal site. As of 2020, it is the only uninhabited county-equivalent to ever be created in the United States. |
 | Centralia, Pennsylvania | A town that's been on fire since 1962. |
 | Clinton Road (New Jersey) | In addition to having the longest traffic light in the country, the road is also notorious for reported occurrences of paranormal activity. |
 | Colma, California | A town where the dead outnumber the living by 1000 to 1. |
 | Corporation Trust Center (CT Corporation) | A small single-story building where over 285,000 companies, or over 15% of all companies in the United States, are legally based. |
 | Crush, Texas | A temporary "city" established as the site of an 1896 publicity stunt, a staged train wreck. The wreck unexpectedly caused two deaths and numerous injuries among spectators. |
 | Dixie Square Mall | A shopping mall that stood abandoned for over twice as long as it was in business until it was finally demolished in 2012. It was featured in the 1980 film The Blues Brothers and became a popular target for urban explorers. |
 | Ernst Thälmann Island | An island off the coast of Cuba that was (sort of) ceded to East Germany and thus (sort of) remains part of East Germany, which doesn't exist anymore (sort of). |
 | Fenelon Place Elevator | The shortest and steepest railroad in the world, (supposedly) located in a town of around 60,000 people. |
 | Florence Y'all Water Tower | A NorthernKentucky town's unique "welcome" sign. |
 | Former counties, cities, and towns of Virginia | All the places that are no longer found in Virginia, such as Illinois County, and a few that never were (including Walton's Mountain). |
 | Gann Valley, South Dakota | It is the county seat of Buffalo County, South Dakota, despite nearby Fort Thompson having a population more than 90 times larger than Gann Valley. |
 | Greater Green River Intergalactic Spaceport | Consists entirely of a deeply rutted unmanned strip of soil/gravel and a windsock. |
 | Gum Wall | A brick wall in Seattle burdened by chewing gum. Cleaned in 2015, only to be turned into a memorial for Paris. |
 | Horace Burgess's Treehouse | A treehouse built by a minister who received a vision from God. |
 | Interstate 180 (Wyoming) | An Interstate Highway that isn't really a freeway at all. |
 | Interstate 19 | The only U.S. highway marked in metric units, a relic of a historical push for metrication. |
 | Republic of Indian Stream | An area of land in northern New Hampshire that was an independent country from 1832 to 1835. |
 | Island of California | The third-largest U.S. state was formerly an island – at least on paper. |
 | Island of the Dolls | Located in Mexico City, is an island full of broken and deteriorated dolls of various styles and colors, originally placed by the former owner of the island. |
 | Jackass Flats | The aptly named test site for the world's first and only nuclear-powered rocket engines. |
 | Jerimoth Hill | The highest natural point in Rhode Island. For years, one of the toughest highpoints in the U.S. to scale, not because of its 812-foot (247 m) height, but because of an angry old man who lived nearby. |
 | Just Room Enough Island | An island with an area of roughly one-thirteenth of an acre, but that didn't stop the Sizelands from building a house on it. |
 | Landsat Island | A lonesome island with a frankly humorous tale. |
 | List of gaps in Interstate Highways | Traffic-lighted intersections, drawbridges, and other oddities in the Interstate Highway System which violate the standards. |
 | List of Las Vegas casinos that never opened | What happened on the drawing board stayed on the drawing board. |
 | London Bridge | An over century year old authentic English bridge...that now resides in the middle of the desert. |
 | M-185 (Michigan highway) | The only state highway in the country that bans motor vehicles. If you thought Texas State Highway 165 was an exceptional state highway, well... |
 | Mary Ellis grave | A grave that found itself in the middle of a movie theater parking lot. |
 | Michigan left | Directions are more complicated in Michigan. |
 | Mickey pylon | A power line pylon with a shape reminiscent of a certain fictional rodent. |
 | Mill Ends Park | The smallest park in the world – 452 in2 (0.292 m2) – in Portland, Oregon. |
 | Mojave phone booth | A public phone booth that stood for several decades in the middle of a desert, miles away from any roads or other structures. |
 | Republic of Molossia | A 34-person micronation in Nevada which takes the meaning of the phrase "a man's home is his castle" to new extremes. |
 | Monowi | A village in Nebraska with a population of one. Hi, Elsie! |
 | National Raisin Reserve | Created after World War II to control raisin prices. Run by the Raisin Administrative Committee, of course. |
 | Nettilling Lake | Located on Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada. It's the largest lake on an island and also contains the largest lake on an island on a lake on an island, which in turn contains the world's largest island in a lake on an island in a lake on an island. |
 | Nitt Witt Ridge | A house in California, built out of beer cans, abalone shells, car parts, and other garbage previously tossed out by local residents, is now a historic landmark. |
 | Plymouth, Montserrat | A national capital with zero population. |
 | Point Roberts, Washington | When defining international boundaries, sometimes a straight line isn't the best solution. |
 | Polar Bear Holding Facility | A prison for polar bears. |
 | Prada Marfa, Texas | For your luxury shopping bug, a Prada store in the desert. |
| N/A | Pyramid mausoleums in North America | Arizona Governor George Hunt will hereafter be addressed as "Pharaoh George I". |
 | Rabbit Hash, Kentucky | A town whose mayors, since 1998, have all been dogs. |
 | Raising of Chicago | During the 1850s, the city was raised on jacks, building by building. |
 | Río Rico, Tamaulipas | A city that was ceded by the United States to Mexico in 1977 due to an earlier diversion of the Rio Grande. |
 | Rough and Ready, California | A currently populated, unincorporated mining town in the United States that seceded from the Union in 1850, forming the "Great Republic of Rough and Ready". Secession was rescinded less than three months later when its citizens noticed that they could not celebrate U.S. independence. |
 | Sam Kee Building | Known as the world's narrowest commercial building. |
 | S.N.P.J., Pennsylvania | A municipality consisting solely of a Slovenian fraternity's recreation center, established (in part) to get around liquor laws. |
 | Spiral Island | An artificial island, now destroyed, built from thousands of empty floating plastic bottles. |
 | State of Scott | Scott County in northern Tennessee seceded and formed its own state in opposition to Tennessee joining the Confederacy. It remained this way for over a century until it rejoined Tennessee in 1986. |
 | Tower of Wooden Pallets | Now replaced by an apartment building, its site remains City of Los Angeles Historic Cultural Monument no. 184. |
 | Track 61 (New York City) | A secret train platform located below the Waldorf Astoria New York designed for use by U.S. Presidents when they would visit the hotel. |
 | U Thant Island | An island in the East River with a surprisingly in-depth history for only being 2,000 square feet (190 m2) in area. |
 | War of the Roses | The historical rivalry between Lancaster and York. Not to be confused with Wars of the Roses, the historical rivalry between Lancaster and York. |
 | Wedge | It's harder than you think to construct the state of Delaware with a ruler and compass. |
 | Whittier, Alaska | A city in Alaska where (almost) all of its residents live in one building: Begich Towers. |
 | World's littlest skyscraper | The result of a fraudulent investment scheme, it's a four-story brick building constructed in 1920 in downtown Wichita Falls, Texas that has only one room on each of its four floors. |
 | Winchester Mystery House | A house believed to be haunted by the ghosts of individuals killed by Winchester rifles. |
 | Zilwaukee, Michigan | "Is this Milwaukee?" "Uh...yeah, it sure is!" |
 | Zone of Death | The part of Yellowstone National Park in Idaho, where any crime can technically be committed without punishment – but don't tempt fate! |
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