The glycocalyx of eukaryotic cells is composed of glycoconjugates, which carry highly complex oligosaccharide portions. To elucidate the biological role and function of the glycocalyx in cell - cell communication and cellular adhesion processes, glycomimetics have become targets of glycosciences, which resemble the composition and structural complexity of the glycocalyx constituents. Here, we report about the synthesis of a class of oligosaccharide mimetics of a high-mannose type, which were obtained by mannosylation of spacered mono- and oligosaccharide cores. These carbohydrate-centered cluster mannosides have been targeted as inhibitors of mannose-specific bacterial adhesion, which is mediated by so-called type 1 fimbriae. Their inhibitory potencies were measured by ELISA and compared to methyl mannoside as well as to a series of mannobiosides, and finally to the polysaccharide mannan. The obtained results suggest a new interpretation of the mechanisms of bacterial adhesion according to a macromolecular rather than a multivalency effect.