Col d'Izoard

Col d'Izoard
Memorial at the top of Col d'Izoard
Elevation2,360 m (7,743 ft)[1]
Traversed byD902
LocationHautes-Alpes, France
RangeAlps
Coordinates44°49′11″N 06°44′06″E / 44.81972°N 6.73500°E / 44.81972; 6.73500
Col d'Izoard is located in Alps
Col d'Izoard
Col d'Izoard
Location of Col d'Izoard

Col d'Izoard (2,360 m (7,743 ft)) is a mountain pass in the Alps in the department of Hautes-Alpes in France.

It is accessible in summer via the D902 road, connecting Briançon on the north and the valley of the Guil in Queyras, which ends at Guillestre in the south. There are forbidding and barren scree slopes with protruding pinnacles of weathered rock on the upper south side. Known as the Casse Déserte, this area has formed a dramatic backdrop to some key moments in the Tour de France and at times in the Giro d'Italia, and often featured in iconic 1950s black-and-white photos of the race.[2][3]

  1. ^ IGN map
  2. ^ "Col d'Izoard – 2360 metres". Grenoble Cycling. Archived from the original on 28 September 2013. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
  3. ^ Université Libre de Bruxelles