Hand-curated GPX files of the world's most famous races and trails. Every route includes accurate elevation data, sourced from official race tracks or USGS terrain. Free for any treadmill app, GPS watch, or training plan.
A 1 km virtual run on Central Park's East Drive — past the famous Cat Hill climb toward the Met. 87 waypoints, OpenStreetMap-traced with USGS elevation. The route every SummitRoom demo uses.
The Barr Trail ascent of Pikes Peak — 21 km of relentless climbing from Manitou Springs at 1,897 m to the 4,302 m summit. +2,400 m of elevation gain, no descent. GPX with USGS terrain data.
The complete 2026 Walt Disney World Marathon course — 42.2 km through all four Disney parks. 6,116 GPS waypoints with elevation, sourced from the official race GPX. Free download.
The 2025 Boston Marathon course from Hopkinton to Copley Square — including Heartbreak Hill at mile 20. 1,381 GPS waypoints with full elevation profile. Free GPX download.
The Cocodona 250 — 386 km of Arizona high-desert ultra from Black Canyon City to Flagstaff. +11,449 m of climbing across 60+ hours of running. 6,334 waypoints, USGS elevation.
For races with official GPX tracks (Boston Marathon, Disney World Marathon, Cocodona 250), we use the published course file directly. For trails without official files, we trace the route from OpenStreetMap geometry and enrich with USGS NED 10-metre elevation data via the OpenTopoData API. Either way, every waypoint has an elevation reading.
Yes. They're standard GPX 1.1, compatible with Garmin Connect, Strava route builder, Komoot, RideWithGPS, Zwift Run, Kinomap, and basically every running app that imports GPX.
The Barr Trail route to Pikes Peak summit is a sparse-waypoint route — we used official trail markers rather than dense GPS pings because the trail itself is well-defined and the elevation samples are what matter for treadmill simulation. Other routes (Disney, Boston, Cocodona) have thousands of waypoints from actual race-day GPS files.