Most professional bike riders spend more than 100 nights per year in hotel rooms, the shuffle between lobby, buffet, elevator becoming an act of muscle memory no matter the layout or location.
In Belgium, however, Bahrain Victorious are doing things a little differently.
“We have this big house, where we all just hang out,” Heinrich Haussler (opens in new tab) tells Cyclingnews. “It’s amazing.”
Interest piqued, we sent photographer Chris Auld to check it out and capture some shots of the Bahrain Victorious (opens in new tab) riders in this more natural of habitats.
Nestled in Zwevegem, amid farmhouses and open fields east of Kortrijk, lies this futuristic rectangular box with its burnt orange facade, licks of black, and huge glass panels that let light pour through from one side to the other.
Inside: sleeping quarters for a squad of cobbled Classics riders, plus a few staff, along with a Playstation, table football, pool table, and more coffee machines than they could possibly need.
There is a greater good here beyond simply having access to the coolest toys. If these things are a distraction, then they are a welcome one from the monotony of hotel life. The riders can live a little more comfortably but also more interestingly.
Hotel common areas are sterile at the best of times but in COVID-19 times they’re literally anything but, which leads riders back into their own hotel rooms and back in on themselves.
A shared house, however, is also more of a shared experience.
“Me and the team bosses had the idea of staying in the villa, being more together, creating that team atmosphere, and trying to build something special,” said Haussler.
“I had this in the past with one team, but a lot of our guys are super young. I say to them ‘guys, what we have now is not normal’. It’s hard to create a team. But it’s already coming up here, we’re in the airplane at the airport.
“It’s a good bunch of guys and at the moment it’s something special. I think it will…
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