Friendly Brass Band Play for Tour de Yorkshire

To celebrate the start of Stage Four of the Tour de Yorkshire from The Piece Hall Sunday 6 May, 12:10pm, Friendly Brass Band will be playing at Westgate Arcade between 11:00am-1:00pm.

Calderdale Industrial Museum Celebrates Tour de Yorkshire

Calderdale Industrial Museum will be open on both Saturday 5 and Sunday 6 May to coincide with the start of the Tour de Yorkshire from the Piece Hall on Sunday 6 May, 12:10pm.

As part of the celebration, the museum will be exhibiting some antique bicycles.

Open 10:00am to 4:00pm (Last entry 3:30pm).

Admission costs £5 Adults/£4 Concessions – Accompanied Children (up to aged 16) and CIMA members go FREE.

For more information visit calderdaleindustrial.co.uk, call 01422 384721 or email info@calderdaleindustrial.co.uk

Not Long Now for Le Tour de Yorkshire 2018

Millions of spectators will line the route for the four-day men’s race and two-day women’s race which run between Thursday 3 May – Sunday 6 May.

The full schedule and race timings can be viewed online now at letour.yorkshire.com/timings

Over 2.2 million people stood roadside last year to cheer on these two wheeled titans. Yorkshire knows how to support a bike race and Welcome to Yorkshire as an organisation strongly promotes these events. This kind of support just isn’t seen in most races in the cycling calendar. Secondly, the terrain. Yorkshire is as beautiful as it is brutal and the riders know that taking part in the Tour de Yorkshire will be rough and rewarding in equal measure.

Cyclists want a challenge and Yorkshire provides that in abundance. As Aqua Blue Sport rider Matt Brammeier summed up quite perfectly; “Without pain and suffering we would be nothing and life would get pretty boring. [The Tour de Yorkshire] provided a fair share for me this weekend but I bloody loved every minute.

For the women taking part in the two-day Asda Tour de Yorkshire Women’s Race, there are other aspects of huge significance. Most important of all is the parity that the race brings. The race takes place on the same roads that the men tackle. The race has one of the largest prize pots in women’s cycling and it gets the same, full television coverage that the men’s race does – exposure that is crucial for riders, teams and sponsors alike.

The 2017 event was particularly enthralling viewing as a world class field including Olympic Road Race champion, Anna van der Breggen, lit up the roads from Tadcaster, through the Yorkshire Dales. The finishing podium was made up of a two-time World Champion, Giorgia Bronzini and American pocket rocket Coryn Rivera. However, the top spot was reserved for someone much closer to home. The Yorkshire flags in Harrogate were waved all that bit more vigorously than usual as the county’s very own hero, Lizzie Deignan, spectacularly sprung a solo attack with 15km to go and powered her way to victory.

“The finish was so special and so surreal and it meant so much to me to receive such great support,” Deignan said afterwards. “It was incredible and I’m struggling to get my head around it. This is up there with the biggest wins of my career, definitely.”

This year sees both races move into new ground; as the Asda Women’s race doubles in length to become a two-day race and the men’s race also gains an extra day, taking it from three to four.

From a racing perspective, this is exciting as it gives both races more time to develop and it presents the stage planners with more chances to create truly spectacular stages.

From a fans perspective, it gives more people more opportunities to see their cycling heroes and allows for more of Yorkshire’s remarkable scenery and brutal climbs to be showcased too. On top of this, 50 per cent of the host towns for this year are first time hosts, with Barnsley, Halifax, Ilkley and Richmond joining Beverley, Doncaster, Leeds and Scarborough in welcoming this year’s race.

Halifax is a Start or Finish Location for the 2018 Tour de Yorkshire

Halifax has been chosen as one of the eight host locations for the 2018 Tour de Yorkshire, meaning a stage of the race will start or finish in the town!

The stages for the newly expanded fourth edition will begin or end in:

Barnsley (South Yorkshire)

Beverley (East Yorkshire)

Doncaster (South Yorkshire)

Halifax (Calderdale)

Ilkley (Bradford)

Leeds (West Yorkshire)

Richmond (North Yorkshire)

Scarborough (North Yorkshire)

Organisers Welcome to Yorkshire and the Amaury Sport Organisation (A.S.O.) revealed  that the newly expanded four-day men’s race will take place between 3-6  May. The Asda Women’s Tour de Yorkshire – which is doubling in size from one to two days – will be held over 3-4 May.

The third edition of the Tour de Yorkshire took place this April and saw the race go from strength to strength once again. A record 2.2 million spectators lined the route and generated £64 million for the Yorkshire economy. The action was also beamed live in 180 countries and attracted 9.7 million global TV viewers on Eurosport and ITV alone.

Next year’s Tour will once again see the return of the Maserati Tour de Yorkshire Ride sportive and give the chance for Tour Makers to volunteer on the race route and help welcome the millions of spectators.

The full 2018 race route will be unveiled on Tuesday 5 December 2017 – this announcement will include exact start and finish locations and the distance and profile of each stage.

Race timings unveiled for 2017 Tour de Yorkshire

The highly anticipated race timings for the 2017 Tour de Yorkshire have been unveiled by Welcome to Yorkshire… read more… 

Millions of spectators will line the route for the three-day men’s race and one-day women’s race which run between 28-30 April. The timings have been calculated by anticipating the peloton’s average speed but are subject to change depending on variables such as wind speed, direction and how aggressively the riders race.

The full schedule and race timings can be viewed online now at letour.yorkshire.com/timings

Amateur cyclists take to the Tour

tour de yorksOn the weekend of the 1 to 3 May 2015, 18 teams of cyclists will be taking part in the inaugural Tour de Yorkshire, with the race travelling through Calderdale on Sunday 3 May.

On the third day thousands of amateur cyclists will also be taking to the streets of the borough in one of the three Tour de Yorkshire sportive’s (mass participation bike rides)… Read more here…

The sportive takes place before the main race event and we’re asking some residents in tricky aspects of the route to help by moving their cars parked on the road by 8am on Sunday 3 May until the last of the sportive has passed at around 12noon.

You can still drive along the roads on which the sportive is taking place but please take extra care as there will be a large number of cyclists along the route. Full details of both the sportive and the main race route are available at www.visitcalderdale.com

Tour de Yorkshire 2015 route announced

tour de yorks mapThe route of the new Tour de Yorkshire has been announced with three days of world class cycling coming to Yorkshire and Calderdale.

The race will start on Friday 1 May along the beautiful east coast from Bridlington to Scarborough and on day 2 on Saturday 2 May the race will venture from Selby to end in a circuit around York which will also include a women’s race.

On Sunday 3 May the race will set off in Wakefield and end in Leeds travelling via Calderdale, descending through Ripponden, down Cragg Vale, before travelling through Mytholmroyd and leaving the region via Hebden Bridge.

There’s lots of information available about the race on the Visit Calderdale website which will have regular updates as the race draws closer.

It’s only 80 days until race weekend, so get ready to release your Inner Cyclist (again!).