Cycling posters inspired by iconic climbs
Cycling posters don’t change your setup mechanically. But they do change how it feels to use.
Each print is based on real mountain routes from some of the most recognised climbs in road cycling. The kind of routes most riders know, have ridden, or keep coming back to, whether that’s on the road or through a screen.
A visual reference to the rides behind the training
Indoor training can feel disconnected from the routes it’s preparing you for.
A cycling poster brings those routes back into the room. Not as a screen or a simulation, but as something static and always present. A reminder of climbs like Alpe d’Huez, Mont Ventoux or Col du Tourmalet.
Placed next to a setup built around a Zwift stand, the poster becomes part of the same context. The ride on the screen and the route on the wall start to relate to each other.
Cycling wall art as part of the setup
Most cycling setups focus on function first. Bike position, screen placement, reach and accessibility. Cycling wall art adds something else. It gives the space a clearer identity without interfering with how it works.
Mounted next to a solution from the bike wall mounts category, a poster can sit alongside the bike itself and extend the visual language of the setup. It turns the wall into more than just storage.
From equipment to atmosphere
The difference between a temporary setup and a space you actually want to use often comes down to small details.
Accessories handle the practical side with towels, bottles and small essentials. Gear organisers define where everything sits.
Posters do something else entirely. They don’t organise or support the ride directly. They shape the atmosphere around it.
Road cycling posters with real data behind them
Each poster is built from actual route data, translating elevation, distance and gradients into a visual format.
That’s what separates them from generic biking posters. They are not just references to cycling. They are representations of specific rides, with real numbers behind the lines.
For riders who know the climbs, that detail matters. And for those who don’t, it adds another layer to discover over time.
A simple way to personalise the space
There’s no single way to build a cycling setup. Some focus purely on performance. Others build something that also feels intentional as a space.
Cycling posters sit in that second layer. Not essential, but often the element that makes the setup feel complete.