Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Kuala Lumpur City Grand Prix

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit

The Kuala Lumpur City Grand Prix (also known as the KL City Grand Prix) is a motor racing event held on the Kuala Lumpur Street Circuit in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The event was first held in 2015, however was cancelled in 2016 due to legal issues. Pending the resolution of the legal issues the event is due to return in 2017.

Contents

Circuit

The 3.2 kilometre, 16 corner street circuit is based in the centre of Kuala Lumpur and passes several major landmarks including the Petronas Towers.

History

The inaugural event was held from 7–9 August 2015. The event's main race, the KL GT City Cup was supported by championship rounds of the Lamborghini Super Trofeo Asia and Formula Masters China series, and an exhibition of five selected cars from the International V8 Supercars Championship from Australia. Legal action in Malaysia threatened the running of the 2016 event, and eventually led to the cancellation of the event. V8 Supercars pledged they plan to honour their contract and race at the event in 2017 pending the resolution of the legal issues.

KL GT City Cup

The KL GT City Cup, a race for GT3 cars, is run as a forty-minute race on the Sunday of the event. The 2015 GT City Cup was won by Japanese driver Naoki Yokomizo. Local Malaysian driver Fairuz Fauzy finished second, but only after having been forced to borrow a car from the Lamborghini Super Trofeo series for the race, having badly damaged his Lamborghini Gallardo GT3 in qualifying.

V8 Supercars

Prior to the first running of the event in 2015, V8 Supercars announced they intended to hold a full championship round at the KL City Grand Prix from 2016 onwards. They then ran a demonstration event at the 2015 event, with only five cars featuring in an exhibition, one representing each of the five marques in the championship. It featured qualifying and then three short races, with the overall winner being Chaz Mostert for Prodrive Racing Australia. Following a positive response to the demonstration, the 2016 championship round was confirmed in September 2015 with the announcement of the calendar for the 2016 season.

In June 2016, the event was cancelled due to the legal issues surrounding the event. The series investigated moving the championship round to the nearby Sepang International Circuit, but this failed to eventuate, leaving a gap in the series calendar. The championship round was to have been known as the KL City 400 and was to follow the International Super Sprint format, which consists of four 100 km races across the weekend. The South East Asia Formula 4 was also due to support the event. Pending inclusion on the 2017 calendar, Kuala Lumpur will become the series' only event outside Australia and New Zealand, and the fourth event in the series' history in Asia; following an event at the Shanghai International Circuit in China in 2005, the Desert 400 in Bahrain from 2006 to 2010 and the Yas V8 400 in the United Arab Emirates from 2010 to 2012.

References

Kuala Lumpur City Grand Prix Wikipedia