Col du Glandon Bike Climb - PJAMM Cycling

11.6
FIETS
12.5 mi
DISTANCE
4,793 ft
GAINED
7.3 %
AVG. GRADE

FULL CLIMB STATS

Page Contributor(s): Erwan Treguier, Brittany, France

INTRO

Col du Glandon from the east and west overlap Col de la Croix de Fer: Croix de Fer West overlaps Glandon West entirely and then climbs another 2.7 km and 151 meters to its col. Croix de Fer North overlaps Glandon East entirely and then climbs 2.7 km and 151 meters to the Croix de Fer col. A map of the Glandon and Croix de Fer ascents is located here: Map of Glandon-Croix de Fer. Col du Glandon has been included in the Tour de France 13 times since it was first introduced in 1947. Glandon was not included after 1947 until 1977 and has been included sparingly thereafter (averaging once every 4 years - 11 times in the 40 years between 1977 and 2017).

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Difficulty: Strenuous
4
Road
2
Traffic
5
Scenery

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Aug 29, 2021
difficulty: Strenuous
scenery: 5
traffic: 2
road: 4
Aug 29, 2021
scenery: 5
traffic: 2
road: 4
We combined this with Croix de Fer North. The first 6 km are thru a tree-lined road and is pretty benign at 6%. After St. Colombard des Villards it kicks up to a steady 7-9% and then the last 3 km up to10-12% for the final push. Terrific views down the valley and also up to Croix de Fer North, which is an easy push to do the second climb. Our only regret was doing it on a Saturday when the car/motorcycle traffic was a constant pain. Lots of other cyclist but that was fine. Don't miss this one..it's fabulous!!
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CLIMB SUMMARY

Cycling Col du Glandon from Saint-Étienne-de-Cuines

Ride 19.6 kilometers gaining 1530 meters at 7.4% average grade.

The Col du Glandon is a mountain pass in the French Alps. It links the Maurienne and Oisans valleys, situated in the departments of Savoie and Isère, respectively. The pass stands at an elevation of 1,924 meters (6,312 feet) and provides access to some of the most stunning landscapes in the region.

Col du Glandon from the east and west completely overlap Col de la Croix de Fer.  Both are famed climbs which have been included in the Tour de France many times

 Here are the basic statistics for the three Croix de Fer climbs, together with the overlap information for Col du Glandon:

  • Col du Glandon West (Le Verney):  29 kilometers gaining 1363 meters at 4.1% (5.6% climb only; all overlapping Croix de Fer West).
  • Col du Glandon East (Saint-Étienne-de-Cuines): 20.2 kilometers  gaining 1,461 meters at 7.3% (all overlapping Croix de fer North).

The climb has been made famous and included in the Tour de France 14 times between 1947 and 2015 as of 2023.

The Col du Glandon eastern approach begins in Saint-Étienne-de-Cuines (population 1,208 as of 20202) and is situated in the Maurienne Valley which is in one of the greatest cycling climbing areas of the world (see, PJAMM Cycling Saint Jean de Maurienne Climb Area page).

Cycling Col du Glandon - col sign

The cycling monument details are slightly different from ours.

The climb passes through several villages over its 20 kilometers until reaching the col at 1,924 m (6,312’). As with nearly all the climbs in this area, the roadway is generally one wide or two narrow lanes but very safe for bike travel.  

The first part of the climb is forested.

Glandon was not included after its first appearance in the TdF in 1947 until 1977 and has been included sparingly thereafter (averaging about once every four years, 11 times in the 43 years between 1977 and 2020).  As of 2023, the last time Glandon had been included in the Tour was 2015.

Keep a sharp eye out - there are several old cement roadway markers along the way.

We pass through meadows with panoramic views along the climb.

Other amazing and famous climbs in this area are Col du Telegraphe, Col du Galibier, Col du Chaussy (Lacets Montvernier), Col du Madeleine, Col de la Croix de Fer and the Granddaddy of them all, Alpe d’Huez!,

We pass above the tree line near the top of the climb.

There are not a lot of hairpins on the climb but we do encounter 4 giant ones just before the Col.

The road tops out at 1,924 meters.  There is a col sign and snack hut at the top.  

Turn left and ride up another 2.5 kilometers to Col de la Croix de Fer.

After a 300 meters slight descent, climb 2.6 kilometers at 5.7% to Col de la Croix de Fer.

TOUR DE FRANCE

It was on this legendary climb that one of the greatest cyclists of all time, Eddy Merckx, began to accept his decline:

“In the mythology of the Tour de France, he is the romantic hero, a sort of lion-hearted Don Quixote who is spurred on by his grand ideals and aggressive mood swings. Whatever his goals, the climber revels in testing his mettle on the most punishing slopes, and it is this archaic face-off with the high mountains that reveals him in his true splendour. Yet his enduring fascination lies in the fact that he is a rebel at heart, a non-conformist capable of overturning in a single day even the most static hierarchy. It always comes down to the mountain stages. It is there that champions meet their destiny and later, without further delegation, their decline.The greatest climbers accept this rule as the natural, inevitable order of things. Louison Bobet bade the Tour farewell in 1959 from the top of the Col de l’Iseran, the highest pass in the Alps, and the Belgian Eddy Merckx sensed the end was nigh on the Col du Glandon during the 1977 Tour de France where the once-mighty shadow he had cast over cycling had dwindled to a dance of death on wheels”  (Philippe Brunel, Born to Climb, The Mountains Made Their Name, Then Swallowed Them Alive, L’Equipe Explore, p. 1) [Emphasis added].

Cycling Col du Glandon, Col de la Croix de Fer sign, PJAMM cycling, bicycle

Merckx realized his mortality on Glandon, Stage 18 1977 TdF.

The king of Col du Glandon is unquestionably Lucien Van Impe (winner 1976 Tour de France).  Van Impe participated in each TdF from 1969 to 1981 and Glandon was featured in three of those tours (1977, 1981, and 1983).  Van Impe was first across the col on each of those stages, on his way to winning the mountain classification each time.

Cycling Col du Glandon, Col de la Croix de Fer sign, PJAMM cycling, bicycle

Lucien Van Impe, the King of the Mountains, and Col du Glandon

Photo:  Philippe B.


Col du Glandon was the prologue to one of the most famous (or rather, infamous?) cycling moments of all time.  Col du Glandon was the middle climb of three on Stage 10 July 17, 2001 (Col dd Madeleine, Col du Glandon, Alpe d’Huez).  Lance Armstrong had dropped from 5:56 back after Stage 7 to 35:43 back after a disastrous Stage 8 which saw a freak breakaway won by Erik Dekker, Alto Gonzalez, and Servais Knaven. Armstrong was 20:07 back after Stage 9 and his main rival that year, Jan Ullrich, was at 22:41 going into Stage 10.

Armstrong appeared weak on Col de Madeleine which led Ullrich and his Team Telekom to begin an insane sprint up Col du Glandon, leaving Armstrong barely(?) hanging on to the rear of this lead group.  However, just a couple kilometers up Alpe d’Huez and with 11 kilometers remaining, Armstrong surged to the front of the group, past Ullrich and then, in a moment of Tour lore, looked back (“The Look”) at Ullrich, fixed his gaze on him momentarily, then put the hammer down and accelerated away from a broken Jan Ullrich to victory and his third Tour de France victory of 7.[1] 

The Look, Alpe d’Huez Stage 10 2001 Tour de France.

Photo from J Barber and F Ruggeri as published in Masculine Heart.

Col du Glandon’s years of inclusion in the Tour de France:

Year

Stage

Category

Start

Finish

Leader at the summit

2013

19

HC

Le Bourg-d'Oisans

Le Grand-Bornand

 Ryder Hesjedal (CAN)

2004

17

1

Le Bourg-d'Oisans

Le Grand-Bornand

 Gilberto Simoni (ITA)

2001

10

HC

Aix-les-Bains

Alpe d'Huez

 Laurent Roux (FRA)

1997

14

1

Le Bourg-d'Oisans

Courchevel

 Richard Virenque (FRA)

1994

17

1

Le Bourg-d'Oisans

Val Thorens

 Richard Virenque (FRA)

1993

10

1

Villard-de-Lans

Serre-Chevalier

 Stefano Colagè (ITA)

1990

11

1

Saint-Gervais-les-Bains

Alpe d'Huez

 Thierry Claveyrolat (FRA)

1988

12

HC

Morzine

Alpe d'Huez

 Steven Rooks (NED)

1983

18

1

Le Bourg-d'Oisans

Morzine

 Serge Demierre (SUI)

1983

17

1

La Tour-du-Pin

Alpe d'Huez

 Lucien Van Impe (BEL)

1981

19

HC

Morzine

Alpe d'Huez

 Lucien Van Impe (BEL)

1977

17

1

Chamonix

Alpe d'Huez

 Lucien Van Impe (BEL)

1947

8

3

Grenoble

Briançon

 Edward Klabiński (POL)

(Wikipedia - Col du Glandon)


[1] We all know, but it is necessary to mention here, that Lance Armstrong’s seven tour victories were all stripped due to the use of PEDs.

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