On February 22, 2026, twelve teams took on the inaugural Cape Town Relay Project — a 140 km relay looping the entire Cape Peninsula from Camps Bay and back. By sundown, every team had finished, and the event had clearly outgrown its status as an experiment.
The fastest crew completed the circuit in just under eight hours, charging through Chapman's Peak, the Cape of Good Hope, Kalk Bay, and the city bowl at a relentless pace. The final team arrived after twelve hours and forty-five minutes, exhausted and elated, welcomed by a crowd that only grew louder as the day went on.
What set this race apart was its foundation in the local running community. Over eighty percent of the field were Cape Town runners who know these roads, trails, and coastlines intimately. Their energy, insight, and commitment shaped the race from the very first kilometer.
Adding to the atmosphere was a dedicated camera crew — a mobile filming unit embedded in the race convoy. It captured the raw emotion, the landscapes, and the beautiful chaos of relay racing in real time, creating an unfiltered visual record of what happens when competition meets one of the most dramatic coastlines on earth.
The Cape Town Relay Project was designed as an experiment: no fixed route between checkpoints, full team autonomy, and a format that rewards strategy as much as speed. The response from the running community confirmed the core belief behind the event: there is a deep appetite for races that feel different, that demand more than just fitness, and that bring people together in ways traditional events rarely do.
The Cape Town Relay Project will return in 2027. Beyond that, anomalie is actively planning new Relay Projects in select cities around the world — expanding the format to new terrain, new communities, and new challenges. This is only the beginning.





































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