The Eagle Road (Norwegian: Ørnevegen) is a very popular tourist section of County Road 63. It connects the towns of Geiranger on the Geirangerfjord and Eidsdal on the Norddalsfjord. For a long time, Geiranger was only accessible via the fjord. The first road connection, the section of County Road 63 known as the Geirangervegen, opened in 1889 and today connects Åndalsnes in Rauma with Langvatn in Skjåk. To this day, this road is only passable in summer. With the opening of the Eagle Road in 1955, Geiranger was accessible by land for the first time year-round. A particularly avalanche-prone section in the upper reaches of Eidsdal is scheduled to be replaced by a tunnel in 2023. - The name "Eagle Road" comes from a former eagle breeding area, through which the upper part of the road led, and on the other hand the name also stands for "the wild and spectacular that one can experience, especially when one stops in the "Eagle Curve" (Ørnesvingen), the uppermost serpentine.