If you are riding this for an event, you will begin in the London start pens which means a lead-in of approximately 3.9km/2.4 miles before you begin your first Classique lap. The Strava segments below begin and end at the start/finish banner located on The Mall, not the main start/finish banner where the game starts your ride. Route details:
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London’s “Greatest London Flat” was released with Zwift’s February 1, 2018 update and is the longest “flat” route on the London course. Related Posts Route Basics Length: 23.6 km (14.7 miles) Elevation: 147 m (482‘)
The London course’s “Classique” route takes you on some of the most famous London streets including Strand, The Mall, Constitution Hill, and Birdcage Walk. You ride by Trafalgar Square and Buckingham Palace.
The London course’s “Classique” route takes you on some of the most famous London streets including Strand, The Mall, Constitution Hill, and Birdcage Walk. You ride by Trafalgar Square and Buckingham Palace. Related Posts
The London course’s “Classique” route takes you on some of the most famous London streets including Strand, The Mall, Constitution Hill, and Birdcage Walk. You ride by Trafalgar Square and Buckingham Palace.
You ride by Trafalgar Square and Buckingham Palace.
London’s “Greatest London Loop” route takes you on the outermost roads on London’s course, beginning with a flat 13 kilometers through the city then over Surrey’s Leith Hill. London’s “Keith Hill After Party” is a custom route introduced for stage 3 of January 2019’s Tour de Zwift .
London’s “Leith Hill After Party” is an event-only route, meaning it is only available for group events. Very similar in profile to London’s “ Keith Hill After Party ” route, the Leith Hill version has an extra 5km of flat road before the finishing climb. Related Posts.
London’s “Greater London 8” route covers the mostly flat “greater London” expansion and Box/Fox Hills. It is very similar to the “ Greater London Loop “, only adding ~4km of flat roads and covering the greater London portion in the opposite direction.
London’s “Greatest London Flat” was released with Zwift’s February 1, 2018 update and is the longest “flat” route on the London course. London’s “Greatest London Flat” was released with Zwift’s February 1, 2018 update and is the longest “flat” route on the London course.
The Greater London 8 *animated* part of the route description does not show the route going up Box Hill, and I’m pretty sure it does. The chart showing the elevation does indicate that it ends like the London Loop routes by climbing Box hilll as the last step.
Riders will be awarded powerups through each segment banner, meaning we’ll get 7 powerups during the race (one each time through the Classique sprint banner, plus one at the start through the main London lap banner).
Many events now being consistently planned each weekend on the upcoming ZRL route. If you’re not familiar with this course, jump into one of these events and do some recon! Here’s a list of upcoming Classique events.
The maximum points a team of 6 could earn in this race. Since the race ends at the final sprint banner, we’ve added those Sprint FAL points to the finishing points total in the chart.
Zwift’s top racers will go head to head in the Premier Division the day before the community races. Watch it below on GCN Racing’s Youtube channel:
Any insights or further thoughts on this sprinters’ race? Share below!
London is a course on Zwift. It is the newest available course in Zwift, and the second most often in active use on the Zwift course schedule. London is based upon sections of the 2016 Prudential RideLondon course and the 2016 Prudential RideLondon Classique Womens Criterium. The course is comprised of two sections. The London section of the course is non-fictional and (like Richmond) aims to accurately model real roads. The Boxhill section including the Boxhill climb is semi-fictional. The KOM is modelled on Boxhill Zig Zag Road, a climb in Surrey that features on the Prudential RideLondon Course. However, the adjoining roads are fictional: such as Foxhill and sections through London underground tube stations. On the map, Boxhill appears to be in southern Greater London, when in reality it is in Surrey.
Eleven circuits of the London Loop, followed by an iconic finish going through the Prudential RideLondon finish arch on The Mall.