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Teretonga Park

Race track in Invercargill, New Zealand

Teretonga Park

Summary

Race track in Invercargill, New Zealand

FieldValue
nameTeretonga Park
locationInvercargill, New Zealand
coordinates
broke_ground
opened
fia_grade3
ownerSouthland Sports Car Club
image[[File:Teretonga Circuit track map.svgclass=skin-invert250px]]
image_captionGrand Prix Circuit (1966–present)
eventsCurrent:
FR Oceania (2005–2020, 2023, 2025–present)
Toyota GR86 Championship (2015–2020, 2023, 2025–present)
Former:
D1NZ (2025)
New Zealand Grand Prix (2002–2007)
New Zealand V8 (2000, 2003–2019)
Tasman Series (1964–1975)
layoutGrand Prix Circuit (1966–present)
length_km2.570
length_mi1.597
turns7
record_time0:51.206
record_driverNZL Greg Murphy
record_carReynard 92D
record_year1998
record_classFormula Holden
layout2Original Circuit (1957–1966)
length2_km2.414
length2_mi1.500
turns28
record_time21:01.800
record_driver2GBR Jim Clark
record_car2Lotus 32B
record_year21965
record_class2F2

FR Oceania (2005–2020, 2023, 2025–present) Toyota GR86 Championship (2015–2020, 2023, 2025–present) Former: D1NZ (2025) New Zealand Grand Prix (2002–2007) New Zealand V8 (2000, 2003–2019) Tasman Series (1964–1975)

Teretonga (meaning "Swift South" in Māori) is a 2.570 km motor racing circuit situated 8 km south-west of Invercargill, New Zealand. It is home of the Southland Sports Car Club. The circuit was established in 1957 and was the southernmost FIA-recognised race track in the world prior to 2023; it has now been succeeded by the Autódromo Enrique Freile in Argentine Patagonia. It is also the country's oldest purpose-built venue.

Regular racing programme includes rounds of the local Clubmans Series; featuring rounds of South Island Racing Registers and a very large Classic Car meeting in February of each year. The circuit is also used for Sprints and Motorkhanas. Other clubs run Motor Cycle and Drag Races at Teretonga. Regarded by many drivers as the best and safest track in the country, it has been up-graded on a continual basis.

History

Teretonga Park viewed from the air
  • Since 1948, the Southland Sports Car Club Inc. has been one of the leading Clubs in the country. The Club entered the International motor race series in 1956 with the fastest-ever motor race on a road circuit at Ryal Bush. This led to the construction of Teretonga Park in 1957 at Sandy Point, the second purpose-built motor racing track in New Zealand. It was extended to its present configuration in December 1966.
  • In the golden age of NZ Motor Racing in the '60s and '70s, Teretonga hosted many of the world's greatest drivers for example, (Stirling Moss), Jim Clark, Graham Hill, Jackie Stewart, Jack Brabham, Bruce McLaren, Denny Hulme, Chris Amon, Phil Hill, the list goes on. There is a fine display of memorabilia in the Clubrooms.
  • Since 1981, the club has been actively engaged in the New Zealand Rally Championship.
  • On 29 November 1998, the current outright lap record was set by Greg Murphy in a Formula Holden Reynard 92D The time was 51.206 at an average lap speed of 184 km/h.
  • The New Zealand Grand Prix was first held on Teretonga in 13 January 2002. A record number of entries were received for this event, and it had been held at Teretonga for 6 years until 13 January 2007
  • On 16 February to Sunday 17 February 2008, the "Leitch Motorsport/Southland Times Speed Fest", which was one of the events of Southern Festival of Speed, was held at Teretonga.

The circuit

As of 2025, a lap was 2.570 km long, and run in anticlockwise direction with an 800 m main straight and a very high speed loop with multiple apexes. It flows smoothly from turns 1 through to 5. The circuit is exposed to a strong sea breeze and often forces gearbox and setup changes.

Lap records

The official lap record for the Teretonga Park is 0:51.206, set by Greg Murphy in 29 November 1998. As of January 2026, the fastest official race lap records at the Teretonga Park are listed as:

CategoryTimeDriverVehicleDateFull Circuit: 2.570 km (December 1966–present)Original Circuit: 2.414 km (November 1957–December 1966)
Formula Holden0:51.206Greg MurphyReynard 92D29 November 1998
Toyota Racing Series0:53.109Lance StrollTatuus FT-5024 January 2015
Formula Regional0:53.660Ugo UgochukwuTatuus FT-6025 January 2026
Formula 50000:53.762Michael CollinsMcRae GM117 February 2019
GT30:54.428Andrew FawcettMcLaren 720S GT324 September 2022
Group 70:56.040Jay EstererMcLaren M6B10 February 2008
Tasman Formula0:58.000Piers CourageBrabham BT2425 January 1969
Porsche Carrera Cup0:58.341David ReynoldsPorsche 911 (997 I) GT3 Cup18 January 2009
NZ Touring Cars (TLX)0:59.276Jack SmithHolden Commodore (VE)20 January 2019
TCR Touring Car1:00.523James PenroseAudi RS 3 LMS TCR24 September 2022
Group 41:02.047Murray SinclairChevron B1617 February 2013
TA21:02.172Toby ElmigerFord Mustang TA225 January 2026
Formula Ford1:02.189Martin ShortMygale SJ07a16 January 2010
NZ Touring Cars (TL)1:02.263John McIntyreFord Falcon (BA)16 January 2005
Group 51:02.470Tom MalloyLola T702 October 2002
Toyota 86 Championship1:07.148Nick CassidyToyota 8625 January 2015
Tasman Formula1:01.800Jim ClarkLotus 32B30 January 1965
Sports car racing1:17.200Archie Scott-BrownLister Knobbly8 February 1958

Notes

References

References

  1. "Teretonga Park - Racingcircuits".
  2. "Teretonga - Home".
  3. "On track for competitive driving". toyotaracing.co.nz.
  4. "Teretonga Park Lap Records".
  5. (24 January 2015). "Summer Fuel Festival - Teretonga 2015 - Toyota Racing Series - Race 5".
  6. (25 January 2026). "2026 Castrol Toyota FR Oceania Trophy - Round 3 - Teretonga Park - Race 4".
  7. (25 January 1969). "1969 Teretonga Tasman".
  8. (25 January 2026). "2026 Ascot Park Hotel Teretonga - SP Tools TA2 NZ Championship - SP Tools TA2 NZ - Race 3 - Official Result".
  9. "Toby Elmiger - Driver Database".
  10. (25 January 2015). "Summer Fuel Festival - Teretonga 2015 - Toyota Finance 86 - Race 10".
  11. (30 January 1965). "1965 Teretonga Tasman".
  12. (8 February 1958). "Teretonga International 1958".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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