Tourist guide

stage 17 - Embrun L'Alpe-d'Huez 210.5 km
Wednesday 23 July

Take a peek…

  • EMBRUN
    The Notre-Dame du Réal Cathedral dominates the town and is the largest religious monument in the Alps. For relaxation, the Lac de Serre-Ponçon, the second largest reservoir in Europe, is the perfect spot.
  • BRIANÇON (km 42)
    The highest town in Europe, fortified by Vauban.
  • VALLOIRE (km 96)
    This season’s French revelation, the skier Jean-Baptiste Grange, learned to ski down the slopes here. The cyclists will pass through in the same direction, after riding over the Galibier pass.
  • ALPE D’HUEZ
    This winter sports resort was born in 1936, with the installation of the first modular mechanical ski lift. For the Tour de France, 1952 was the first year that the famous climb with its 21 bends was used. Fausto Coppi was the first to conquer it.
 

The Tour pays a visit to…

Luc Alphand, born in Briançon, won the Skiing World Cup’s overall Crystal Globe in 1997, before embarking on a second career in motor racing, in which he has already excelled, having won the Dakar race.

“Since I finished doing competitions, I now travel for eight or nine months a year, but it is still the part of the world I know the best. I was born in Briançon and grew up in Serre-Chevallier. I love going back there to recharge my batteries and consider myself really lucky to live in this environment. I love the Vallouise valley, for example. It is in this area that I have made beer with my brother since 1999. Last year, I started to do Randonée skiing, with sealskins. These are the days I love, like when I do enduro-sport in the summer. I’d go so far as to say that in this region, we have our own very specific identity: I feel like I belong more to the Southern Alps, in other words, I’m more “Provencal” than “Savoyard”. I also like the isolated aspect of this region. The nearest motorway is 100 kilometres from my home and not everyone has that privilege.

I remember the first time I went to watch the Tour, on the climb towards the Izoard pass. My aunt took me and we got stuck somewhere and had no choice but to wait for the race. A few hours later, the riders arrived, but heading downhill! Later, I was lucky enough to spend a stage in Christian Prudhomme’s car, and thoroughly enjoyed the spectacle. I do about 5,000 km a year myself and I know what it’s like climbing all those mountain passes. So, whatever you might say, I have enormous respect for the suffering and commitment that this demands.”