WHAT'S NEW
Our Visit to Ridley HQ
Tessenderlo, Belgium: Heart of Flanders, heart of cycling. Trivial notes: The town was the site of Tom Steels' 2004 Belgian National Championship and, in 2005, Ludo Dierckxsens' final race as a pro. Personal notes: It's home of the first bread vending machine I've ever seen and in its January misery (-3˚ Celsius; wet grey skies; a jacket-nullifying wind), it begged one question above all else: How do people here get fit for March racing? Unlike, say, Pittsburgh or Cleveland, the expectation in Flanders is that you'll be flying-fit in March. Summertime racing is near-irrelevant. Getting hard when it's hardest: That's the essential expectation that will always separate Flanders from the rest of the world.
With my head down, walking the nighttime streets of Tessenderlo, the answer to my question was grim and it was obvious: In this place unlike any other on Earth, bicycle racing is a treasured, holy thing. The boys who suffer and starve to put themselves in reach of the podium -- they are royalty of a kingdom existent only here. By what means were they getting fit for the impending races? Perhaps they were like the squat old ladies we saw commuting home in the icy twilight just a few hours before -- bundled 4" thick with coats and scarves because riding through the winter shit in January is just what you do in Flanders. Or, perhaps, the apartments I was walking beneath were home to madly iron, madly dreaming souls passing hour #3 in today's trainer session.
Tessenderlo has one other hardwired connection to the soul of competitive cycling: It is the home of Ridley Bicycles. To visit their HQ and then spend time in the surrounding villages is to appreciate the meaning of their famous tagline We Are Belgium. There are glamorous bike companies out there: Cervelo's positioning as a subsidiary of NASA; the Rapha models' curated pout; the home-wrecking aphrodesia wrought by anything Pinarello.
To visit Ridley is to see the opposite.
Part of it is the nature of the region: Immensely industrialized. What mountains and the sea are to Italy, smokestacks and mine heaps are to Belgium. The surrounding roads are riven by the black-belching freight trucks of northern Europe. For the first time in 27 years, memories arose of All The Right Moves.
Yet that spirit -- the We Are Belgium -- it's more than mere surroundings. Ridley is a company whose roots are utterly blue collar, and whose growth in prominence has been anything but easy. We root for them not just for the fact they're at ground zero of the world's best bike races, but because their corporate journey has been tempered by tough times. In that toughness they've found strength and, ultimately, global success.
Ridley built an expansive new HQ only a year ago -- a long way from the company's origins as a one-man paint booth. The beauty of the facility gives physical reality to the truth that Ridley has become Belgium's most widely respected bike manufacturer. True to the company roots, much of the HQ is devoted to the painting, the decal application, and the clear-coating of their high-end frameset range. And in a sign of the loyalty the founder and CEO, Jochim Aerts, has for the customers he earned in his early days, a corner of the company is stacked with respray-in-progress car wheels -- a formerly important part of his paint business.
Ridley arguably has the most comprehensive line of high-end bikes in the marketplace. The Helium is a superlight mountain goat. The Damocles is dialed for a day on the pavé. The Noah is your super-sexy summertime solo breakaway bike. The Dean is the same thing, TT-style. And the X-Fire has won the last 300 world cyclocross championships. It's a diversity that spawns bike lust possibly trumped by only one other thing -- a visit to Ridley HQ aka immersion in Flemish race culture. Some photos from our recent afternoon there --
February 21, 2011
confused about the comments about china. really? its 2011. there is not a carbon brand in the peleton that has not outsourced or is based in twn and china, you guys know that, right?
- pierre, toronto
February 16, 2011
What are the revenue figures for a company like Ridley? Does anyone make any money in this industry?
- John, Pittsburgh
February 15, 2011
designed in belgium, made in taiwan, painted in belgium with japanese and italian parts..................smack talk from around the world...........i love our sport.........
- Bill Forrest, el dorado hills, ca
February 15, 2011
jc et al-
comparing belgian pros training to your training in new england is like comparing your kid's t-ball practice to fort meyers spring training. same hat; completely different universe. most pros are dumb; but not generally dumb enough to train in freezing conditions if it can be helped; that's why god invented trainers and cheap package charters from zaventem to mallorca.
- me, down by the river
February 14, 2011
Flahute!
- Kurt, N Stonington
February 14, 2011
Tripel Karmeliet. You know your beer.
- Mike, Sydney
February 10, 2011
with fashion week in NY around the corner, the similarities between "SUPERMODELS' and "pros" is apparent: weight + ego
- heidi klum-karpets, brussels
February 10, 2011
Made in China but finished in Belgium with Japanese and Italian components.
- jim, teaneck, nj
February 10, 2011
Seriously - you think that's cold? Try training for racing here in New England, where our racing schedule starts proper in last week of March. Those conditions are balmy compared to some o the rides we do each winter - if you live here, you just gotta suck it up and deal with it. Mix in 2-3 quality interval days on the trainer each week, and you've got yourself a recipe for fitness.
It's all about proper layering and mental outlook - sometimes it's motivation enough to head out in the crap, when you know most of your competitors are comfortably indoors (getting slower).
- JC, Newton, MA
February 10, 2011
We Are Belgium. By way of China.
- Ho, Down
February 10, 2011
That picture labeled Unpainted Damocles ISP looks more like a Helium. Damocles has the wishbones stays and sharp tube shapes. The Made In China boxes that this unpainted frame is sitting on probably contain the Damocles. To my surprise, my new Damocles ISP was made in China. Guess I shouldn't really be surprised.
- Ed, Tennessee
February 10, 2011
Personally, I'd be more interested in seeing the factory they're laid up in than where their toenails get painted...
- James, Sydney
February 10, 2011
Landa da Panda.
- Hans, Göteborg
February 09, 2011
Negative 5 Celsius, bah--how about negative 5 Fahrenheit (-22 C for the logical types) and windy on my training ride in Minnesota? Beautiful bikes and beautiful workmanship, that is all I can say of the Ridleys. I have had the privilege of putting one or two of these together, and everything just fits.
As it should.
- Evan, Minneapolis
February 09, 2011
so beautiful.
- Brian, Denver
February 09, 2011
Ampipe FTW! When I was 12 and living in the pre-internet era All the Right Moves was always a good late night score on HBO.
- Todd , Los Angeles
February 09, 2011
Diggin' those Ambrosios. You need to carry them. I-tal Techno takes forever.
- Bud, Elkins Park
February 09, 2011
You've got to cage those Katusha frames up. Ornery little suckers.
- Ishmael, Pequod
February 09, 2011
Thanks for sharing. Great write up and photos to match!
- Isa Amistad, Edmonton
February 09, 2011
Is that a made in China?
- Jim, Arizona













































