Col d'Ornon explained

Col d'Ornon
Elevation M:1360
Traversed:D526
Map:Alps
Label:Col d'Ornon
Coords:45.0089°N 5.9675°W
Location:Isère, France
Range:Dauphiné Alps

Col d'Ornon (13600NaN0) is a mountain pass through the Dauphiné Alps in the department of Isère in France which connects the communities of Le Bourg-d'Oisans and La Mure. The climb is used occasionally in the Tour de France cycle race, including on the "Queen stage" on 18 July 2013 which finishes with two ascents to Alpe d'Huez.[1]

Details of the climb

From the south, the climb starts at Entraigues, from where the ascent is 14.4km (08.9miles) long gaining 563m (1,847feet) in height at an average gradient of 3.9%.[2] For the 2013 Tour de France, the climb officially starts at the village of Chantelouve (10300NaN0) from where the climb to the summit, ranked Category 2, is a further 5.1km (03.2miles) at a gradient of 6.7%.[1]

From the north, the climb commences 3km (02miles) from Le Bourg-d'Oisans at La Paute in the Romanche valley. The ascent is 11.1km (06.9miles) long, climbing 643m (2,110feet) at an average gradient of 5.8%.[3]

Tour de France

The Col d'Ornon was first used in the Tour de France in 1966 when the leader over the summit was Luis Otaño. Since then, the Tour has passed the summit on eight occasions, usually as a Second Category climb, including on Stage 17 of the 2017 Tour.[4]

Appearances in Tour de France

YearStageCategoryStartFinishLeader at the summit
2017172La MureSerre Chevalier
2013182GapAlpe d'Huez
2002152Vaison-la-RomaineLes Deux-Alpes
1994162ValréasAlpe d'Huez
199117 2GapAlpe d'Huez
1982162Orcières-MerletteAlpe d'Huez
1979183Alpe d'HuezAlpe d'Huez
1966152PrivasLe Bourg-d'Oisans

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Stage 18: Gap / Alpe-d'Huez. Le Tour de France. 18 July 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130711005752/http://www.letour.fr/le-tour/2013/us/stage-18.html. 11 July 2013. dead. dmy-all.
  2. Web site: Col d'Ornon: Entraigues . climbbybike.com. 18 July 2013.
  3. Web site: Col d'Ornon: La Paute. climbbybike.com. 18 July 2013.
  4. Web site: Le col d'Ornon dans le Tour de France. ledicodutour. 23 July 2022. French.