While major helmet makers continue to incorporate new tech to boost rider safety like variations on MIPS, materials like Koroyd, extended rear occipital coverage & smart crash sensors like ANGi, the basic half-shell road bike helmet remains mostly unchanged. Now a French designer’s new Ventoux concept reimagines how enduro full-face protection could be adapted for light, even aero road use as well…
Ventoux aero full-face road bike helmet concept

A product of the imagination of young French designer Jean-Baptiste Petricoul, the Ventoux aero hybrid protection full-face road bike helmet is meant to blend the best of lightweight, multi-purpose road helmets with the extra protection of full-face gravity lids. Road, cross-country, and even urban helmets have resisted the chin bar – probably most because of the added complication, extra weight, and inconvenience of their closed-in designs. Petricoul imagines that with modern materials, a hybrid solution between open & full-face designs could offer the best of both worlds.
The heart of the Ventoux aero hybrid protection helmet is a multi-layered construction, and a lightweight removable chin bar. Much like some modern light enduro helmets, the Ventoux chin bar could be attached at four points into the main EPS foam body & polycarbonate shell of the helmet to distribute impact forces to the front of the face. Petricoul’s design relies on a stiff chin bar with either a metal or carbon composite construction – designed to somewhat limit sliding on your face in a crash. The design is much more open than conventional mountain bike full face helmets, so as to not impede ventilation, visibility, or the ability to eat or drink with the helmet.
Equally important in the design is an inner shell of the helmet that would incorporate padding, chin straps, and fit retention – rotating in the manner of a MIPS liner to allow the low chin protection to rotate up in the event of a crash. Presumably this could prevent neck injury from rotation or include a break away feature as well?