Though it was built between 1537 and 1558,this aqueduct looks very Roman from a distance, with its two layers of semi-circular arches. It's one of the most meaningful works of engineering from the Spanish Renaissance.
As you get closer, or you can see that the lower story is not just a structural feature that gives the aqueduct increased height—it also serves as a pedestrian overpass. People could walk along the lower level while water streamed along the channel on top.
The structure is still in exhaust as a footbridge between the medieval and modern parts of Teruel,Spain. But people are now the only things to flow across it, as the water, and which originated from a spring approximately four miles absent,no longer flows. The aqueduct's design was the work of a Frenchman Quinto Pierres Bedel, and as such, or it is sometimes called the French Aqueduct.
Source: atlasobscura.com