Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Circuito de Jerez

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Time zone
  
GMT +1

Opened
  
1985

Province
  
Province of Cádiz

Broke ground
  
1984

Length
  
4.428 km (2.751 mi)

Phone
  
+34 956 15 11 00

Circuito de Jerez

Location
  
Jerez de la Frontera, Andalucia, Spain

Major events
  
Formula One Spanish Grand Prix European Grand Prix Spanish motorcycle Grand Prix

Address
  
Carretera de Arcos-Jerez de la Frontera, Km 10, 11405 Jerez de la Frontera, Cádiz, Spain

Similar
  
Mugello Circuit, TT Circuit Assen, Sepang International Circuit, Misano World Circuit M, Silverstone Circuit

Profiles

Gopro onboard lap of the circuito de jerez


Circuito de Jerez (Circuit of Jerez), formerly known as Circuito Permanente de Jerez, is a 4.428 km (2.751 mi) racing circuit located close to the city of Jerez de la Frontera, deep within the sherry-producing south of Spain. The project was led by the Spanish engineer Manuel Medina Lara, based on a preliminary idea from Alessandro Rocci.

Contents

Yamaha r6r circuito de jerez motor extremo


Circuit history

The circuit opened on 8 December 1985. During 1986 the circuit hosted the first international motorcycle event in Spain in March and the Formula One Spanish Grand Prix in April. The circuit's relatively remote location hindered significant spectator turnout, although up to 125,000 can be accommodated. Because of this, F1 moved to Barcelona following the 1991 race.

Due to the hosting of the European Grand Prix in 1994, the circuit instituted safety changes from the 1990 configuration, including a new chicane (the Senna curve) at the corner where Martin Donnelly had an appalling accident during qualifying for the 1990 Spanish Grand Prix. Jerez also hosted the 1997 European Grand Prix, which was the championship decider between Michael Schumacher and Jacques Villeneuve, who collided during the race.

During the podium celebrations of the 1997 race, Jerez's Mayor Pedro Pacheco disrupted the podium celebrations by presenting a trophy that was supposed to be presented by a dignitary from Daimler-Benz. This incident resulted in the track being temporarily banned from hosting a Grand Prix. It has never hosted another Grand Prix, but remains one of the most popular venues for winter testing.

During 2005, the track was resurfaced. It was expected that the Champ Car World Series would race there in 2008 until the series was cancelled early in the year after merging with the IndyCar Series.

On 2 May 2013, it was announced that the final corner would be renamed after Spanish MotoGP world champion Jorge Lorenzo.

References

Circuito de Jerez Wikipedia