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Valencia Street Circuit

Street circuit in Valencia, Spain

Valencia Street Circuit

Street circuit in Valencia, Spain

FieldValue
nameValencia Street Circuit
locationValencia, Spain
coordinates
image[[File:Circuit Valensia street.svgclass=skin-invert250px]]
image_captionGrand Prix Circuit (2008–2012)
architectHermann Tilke
opened
closed2013
eventsFormula One
European Grand Prix (2008–2012)
GP2 (2008–2012)
GP3 (2010–2012)
Porsche Supercup (2008–2010, 2012)
Formula BMW Europe (2008–2010)
International GT Open (2008)
Spanish F3 (2008)
layoutGrand Prix Circuit (2008–2012)
surfaceAsphalt
length_km5.419
length_mi3.367
turns25
record_time1:38.683
record_driverGER Timo Glock
record_carToyota TF109
record_year2009
record_classF1
Note

the street circuit

European Grand Prix (2008–2012) GP2 (2008–2012) GP3 (2010–2012) Porsche Supercup (2008–2010, 2012) Formula BMW Europe (2008–2010) International GT Open (2008) Spanish F3 (2008)

Valencia Street Circuit

The Valencia Street Circuit (, ) was a street circuit in Valencia, Spain which hosted the Formula One European Grand Prix for five years (2008–2012). The first Formula One race meeting on the circuit was held over the 23–24 August 2008 weekend, with Felipe Massa winning the main event, the European Grand Prix, after starting from pole position. The circuit used the roads skirting the city's harbour and America's Cup port area – including a section over a 140 m swing bridge – and also included some roads designed exclusively for racing purposes by the German architect Hermann Tilke, who also designed the infrastructure buildings for the circuit. The 2012 edition took place on 24 June and was the last to go under the name of the European Grand Prix until 2016, when the Baku City Circuit used the title for one year. The circuit has been left abandoned after a deal fell through to alternate this venue with Catalunya in Barcelona to host the Spanish Grand Prix.

History

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The deal to host the Valencia race was signed on 1 June 2007, and was for seven years. The deal was made between Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone and the Valmor Sport group, led by former motorcycle racer Jorge "Aspar" Martínez and Villarreal CF's president Fernando Roig. The deal came about despite Ecclestone previously stating that no European country should hold more than one race each year, as there was already a Spanish Grand Prix at the Circuit de Catalunya.

Initially, the deal was rumoured to be conditional on the People's Party winning regional elections on 27 May 2007. On 16 May, Ecclestone clarified his comments, explaining "I said I wouldn't formalise a contract until after the elections because I didn't know who I would be signing it with" and claiming his earlier statements had been taken out of context. Ecclestone was later cleared of influencing the election by the Valencian Electoral Commission.

The official track layout was unveiled by Valencia Councillor and transport counselor, Mario Flores, on 19 July 2007. The track was first used in the last weekend of July 2008, as the circuit hosted a round of the Spanish F3 Championship and International GT Open. It was first used for the European Grand Prix on 24 August 2008.

Layout

The track was 5.419 km long and incorporated a total of 25 turns – 11 left-handers and 14 right-handers. It was estimated that the track had a top speed of around 323 km/h, with a lap record of 1:38.683, set by Timo Glock during the 2009 European Grand Prix. Valencia was not as tight as Circuit de Monaco but overtaking opportunities were still scarce, due to the straights not being straight and the dust away from the racing line. Nico Hülkenberg noted there was quite a lot of space for a street circuit, and some corners had a lot of run-off area; Robert Kubica suggested that good traction and braking stability were crucial to win at the circuit, due to the number of long straights that ended in heavy braking zones.

The circuit was criticised by drivers for its lack of overtaking opportunities. Changes in Formula One in 2011, including the introduction of the Drag Reduction System and the switch to Pirelli tyres, partially improved that with 27 passes recorded in that year's race, 22 of which were accredited to the assistance of DRS. However, the five 'normal' overtakes still represented the year's second lowest total, although the adoption of two DRS zones for that year's race limited the potential for non-DRS assisted passes. Despite this, the 2012 race was shown to have many different overtakes and became one of the most thrilling races of the season. It also had four retirements compared to zero during the 2011 race.

A lap in a Formula One car

The pit straight is short and immediately leads into the flat-out turn 1 before cars heavily brake down to 60 mph for the right-left complex of turns 2 and 3, passing the Grau Metro station. A curved 'straight' leads into a left-right chicane: turns 4 and 5, by the Neptune Hotel. Drivers exit the 85 mph chicane by running very close to the wall, before sweeping through the kinks of turns 6 and 7, then braking heavily for the following swing bridge section. One of the slowest corners on the track, turn 8, with an apex speed of around 55 mph, leads drivers over the bridge before immediately braking again into the equally slow turn 10. Good traction is important out of here as the following section is a DRS zone with a top speed along the kinked 'straight' of around 200 mph, with a heavy braking zone for the 90 mph turn 12/13 chicane; a 2nd-gear, right-left complex. Turn 14 is a medium speed right-hander before another, shorter DRS zone that leads through two left-hand kinks before the turn 17 hairpin at Museu de les Ciències Príncipe Felipe. Right-handed and a good spot for overtaking, turn 17 is taken at about 60 mph. A series of flat-out, or near flat-out sweeping curves follow, with the right-handers of turns 19 and 20 the most challenging of the bunch. Turn 25 is a hairpin, taken at about 60 mph; the run to the line following this left-hander is fairly short but requires good traction and acceleration for the best lap time.

Lap records

The fastest official race lap records at the Valencia Street Circuit are listed as:

CategoryTimeDriverVehicleEventGrand Prix Circuit: 5.419 km (2008–2012)
Formula One1:38.683Timo GlockToyota TF1092009 European Grand Prix
GP21:46.487Nico HülkenbergDallara GP2/082009 Valencia GP2 Series round
GP31:58.748Esteban GutierrezDallara GP3/102010 Valencia GP3 Series round
Formula Three2:04.279Natacha GachnangDallara F3062008 2nd Valencia Spanish F3 round
GT22:07.423Richard LietzPorsche 911 (997 I) GT3 RSR2008 2nd Valencia International GT Open round
Porsche Carrera Cup2:10.070René RastPorsche 911 (997 II) GT3 Cup 3.82010 Valencia Porsche Supercup round
Formula BMW2:13.789Robin FrijnsMygale FB022010 Valencia Formula BMW Europe round

References

References

  1. (23 July 2008). "Telefónica, Principal Sponsor of the Formula 1 Telefónica Grand Prix of Europe". [[Generalitat Valenciana]].
  2. (28 January 2008). "Telefónica is European GP Sponsor (Translated from Spanish)". Valenciacircuitourbano.com.
  3. "The Official Formula 1 Website". Formula One.
  4. (25 June 2010). "Motorsport: Spanish drivers eager to please home fans". The New Zealand Herald.
  5. "Fernando Alonso wins brilliantly in Valencia". BBC Sport.
  6. "2012 Grand Prix of Europe". Formula 1™.
  7. (17 October 2013). "Valencia slams Catalunya over F1 alternation".
  8. (30 May 2008). "Swing Bridge Already Closed". [[Generalitat Valenciana]].
  9. (1 June 2007). "Valencia deal done". GPUpdate.net.
  10. (10 May 2007). "Valencia street race for 2008". The Official Formula 1 Website.
  11. (16 May 2007). "Ecclestone seeks to clarify Valencia deal". EEMS.
  12. (21 June 2007). "Bernie Ecclestone cleared of influencing elections in Valencia, with Formula 1 announcement". bymnews.com.
  13. (19 July 2007). "Valencia track unveiled". Pitpass.
  14. Bouman, Berthold. (2011-06-23). "Valencia all set for this year's European Grand Prix".
  15. (23 June 2012). "Preview of the European Grand Prix". Viva F1.
  16. Collantine, Keith. (2012-06-24). "Rate the race: 2012 European Grand Prix".
  17. Thomas, Daniel. (2012-07-02). "European Grand Prix rated best race of 2012 so far".
  18. (25 February 2014). "Valencia Street Circuit Layout – GT Sport". GT Sport.
  19. "Valencia street track – circuit information". F1 Fanatic.
  20. (24 August 2008). "2008 Spanish F3 Championship Round 5: Valencia Street Circuit, 24th August".
  21. (27 July 2008). "GT Open Valencia 2008".
  22. (27 June 2010). "Rennergebnis Porsche Supercup Valencia 27.06.2010".
  23. (26 June 2010). "2010 Formula BMW Europe Valencia (Race 1)".
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