tracks of the americas
circuit of the americas
Circuit of the Americas (COTA) is a grade 1 FIA-specification 5.514 km motor racing track and facilities located within the extraterritorial jurisdiction of Austin, Texas. The circuit and Grand Prix were first proposed in the middle of 2010. The circuit was the first in the United States to be purpose-built for Formula One. The layout was conceived by promoter Tavo Hellmund and 1993 Motorcycle World Champion Kevin Schwantz with the assistance of German architect and circuit designer Hermann Tilke, who has also designed the Sepang, Shanghai, Yas Marina, Istanbul, Bahrain, Yeongam, and Buddh circuits, as well as the reprofiling of the Hockenheimring and Fuji Speedway. The circuit has an FIA Grade 1 license.
Austin, Texas
3.426 km
race lap record 1:36.169
Charles Leclerc, Ferrari SF90, 2019
miami grand prix
Formula 1 is heading back to Florida, with the news that the brand-new Miami Grand Prix will join the F1 calendar in 2022. The race – set to be the first since 1959 in the US state – will be held on an exciting new layout at the Hard Rock Stadium complex in Miami Gardens, home to the NFL’s famous Miami Dolphins franchise. The circuit itself will be 5.41km, and will feature 19 corners, three straights and potential for three DRS zones, with an estimated top speed of 320km/h. Hard Rock Stadium – a multi-purpose sports and entertainment hub which has hosted six Super Bowls, two Baseball World Series and numerous rock concerts - will sit at the heart of the track.
Miami, Florida
5.41 km
Race lap record 1:31.361
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB18, 2022
las vegas strip circuit
The Las Vegas Grand Prix is a planned Formula One Grand Prix due to form part of the 2023 Formula One World Championship, with the event taking place at Las Vegas, Nevada, at the Las Vegas Strip.
The last time Las Vegas was included in the Formula One calendar was in 1982, with the Caesars Palace Grand Prix. The event is due to take place on Saturday in November 2023, around the Las Vegas Strip. It will be the third Grand Prix in the United States to take place on the 2023 calendar after the Miami and the United States Grands Prix.
The 6.120 km street circuit features 14 corners and a 1.920 km straight. The circuit runs anti-clockwise, and starts in a disused parking lot (which will be re-developed for the pits and paddock area, and contains permanent track).
Paradise, Nevada, United States
6.120 km
Race lap record 1:35.490
Oscar Piastri, McLaren MCL60, 2023
caesars palace grand prix
The Caesars Palace Grand Prix was a car race held in Las Vegas between 1981 and 1984. For the first two years, the race was part of the Formula One World Championship, before becoming a round of the CART series in 1983. Nissan/Datsun was a presenting sponsor of both races. The track was laid out in the parking lot of the Caesars Palace hotel and was set up for a temporary circuit. Wide enough for overtaking, it provided ample run-off areas filled with sand and had a surface that was as smooth as glass. Its counter-clockwise direction, however, put a tremendous strain on the drivers' necks.
Caesars Palace Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada
3.650 km
Lap record 1:19.639
Michele Alboreto, Tyrrell-Ford, 1982
fair park
Fair Park is a recreational and educational complex in Dallas, Texas, United States, located immediately east of downtown. The 112 ha area is registered as a Dallas Landmark and National Historic Landmark; many of the buildings were constructed for the Texas Centennial Exposition in 1936.
Fair Park has been designated a Great Place in America by the American Planning Association.
Dallas, Texas
3.901 km
Lap record 1:45.353
Niki Lauda, McLaren-TAG, 1984
indianapolis motor speedway
The Indianapolis Motor Speedway is an automobile racing circuit located in Speedway, Indiana (an enclave suburb of Indianapolis) in the United States. It is the home of the Indianapolis 500 and the Brickyard 400, and formerly the home of the United States Grand Prix. It is the largest sports venue in the world. It is located on the corner of 16th Street and Georgetown Road, approximately 10 km west of Downtown Indianapolis. Constructed in 1909, it is the second purpose-built, banked oval racing circuit after Brooklands and the first to be called a 'speedway'.
Speedway, Indiana
2.605 km
Race lap record 1:10.399
Rubens Barrichello, Ferrari F2004, 2004
grand prix of long beach
The Grand Prix of Long Beach (known as Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach for the 2019 event) is an IndyCar Series race held on a street circuit in downtown Long Beach, California. The Long Beach Grand Prix is the longest running major street race held in North America. It started in 1975 as a Formula 5000 race, and became a Formula One event in 1976. In an era when turbocharged engines were starting to come to prominence in Formula One, Long Beach remains one of the few circuits used from the time Renault introduced turbos in 1977 until the last Long Beach Grand Prix in 1983 that never once saw a turbo-powered car take victory.
Long Beach, California
3.167 km
Race lap record 1:28.330
Niki Lauda McLaren-Ford Cosworth, 1983
detroit street circuit
The streets of Detroit, in the U.S. state of Michigan hosted Formula One racing, and later CART racing, between the 1982 and 1991 seasons. The street circuit (course) was set up near the Renaissance Center and the Cobo Arena, also including a small part of the M-1 highway, also known as Woodward Avenue. It is a flat circuit, with elevation ranging from 176 to 184 metres above sea level. Created largely in an effort to improve the city's international image, the race meant that the United States would host three Grands Prix in the 1982 season (the other two US races, Long Beach and Las Vegas, had been added to the schedule for similar purposes), the only nation in F1 history to do so until the 2020 season, when Italy also hosted three Grands Prix: Monza, Mugello and Imola.
Detroit, Michigan, USA
4.168 km
Race lap record 1:50.438
Alain Prost, Renault RE30B, 1982
phoenix street circuit
The Formula One United States Grand Prix was held on the Phoenix street circuit in Phoenix, Arizona, between 1989 and 1991. It was held in downtown by the Phoenix Civic Plaza and the America West Arena, prior to the introduction of the state's baseball stadium, Bank One Ballpark. The United States Grand Prix lasted in Phoenix for three years, but was inexplicably dropped by Formula One management. There were no further Formula One races in the US until the Indianapolis Motor Speedway first held a Grand Prix in 2000.
Phoenix, Arizona, United States
3.800 km
Race lap record 1:21.434
Ayrton Senna, McLaren-Honda MP4/6, 1991
riverside international raceway
Riverside International Raceway (sometimes known as Riverside, RIR, or Riverside Raceway) was a motorsports race track and road course established in the Edgemont area of Riverside County, California, just east of the city limits of Riverside and 50 miles east of Los Angeles, in 1957. It was also considered one of the finest tracks in the United States. The track was in operation from September 22, 1957, to July 2, 1989. The track was built to accommodate several different configurations, depending on the type of car and race length.
Riverside (now Moreno Valley), California
5.271 km
Lap record 1:56.3
Jack Brabham, Cooper-Climax, 1960
sebring international raceway
Sebring International Raceway is a road course auto racing facility in the southeastern United States, located near Sebring, Florida. Sebring Raceway is one of the oldest continuously operating race tracks in the U.S., its first race being run in 1950. Sebring is one of the classic race tracks in North American sports car racing, and plays host to the 12 Hours of Sebring. In 1959, the track hosted the U.S.' first Formula One race (the successor to historic European Grand Prix motor racing), held as that year's installment of the historic United States Grand Prix competition. However poor attendance and high costs relocated the next U.S. Grand Prix to Riverside International Raceway in southern California.
Highlands County, Florida, USA
8.66 km
Lap record 3:05.0
Maurice Tritignant, Cooper-Climax, 1959
watkins glen international
Watkins Glen International, nicknamed "The Glen", is an automobile race track located in the town of Dix just southwest of the village of Watkins Glen, New York, at the southern tip of Seneca Lake. It was long known around the world as the home of the Formula One United States Grand Prix, which it hosted for twenty consecutive years (1961–1980), but the site has also been home to road racing of nearly every class, including the World Sportscar Championship, Trans-Am, Can-Am, NASCAR Cup Series, the International Motor Sports Association and the IndyCar Series.
Watkins Glen, New York
5.435 km
Lap record 1:33.291
Bruno Giacomelli, Alfa Romeo, 1980
circuit gilles villeneuve
The Circuit Gilles Villeneuve (also spelled Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve in French) is a motor racing circuit in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is the venue for the FIA Formula One Canadian Grand Prix. It has previously hosted the FIA World Sportscar Championship, the Champ Car World Series, the NASCAR Canadian Tire Series, the NASCAR Xfinity Series and the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series. The Canadian Grand Prix was first held at the circuit in 1978, where hometown hero Gilles Villeneuve won for Ferrari. The Grand Prix quickly became a mainstay of the Formula One calendar, with the race taking place in Montreal for the next thirty years. Once held in late September, the event was moved to its present location on the calendar of mid-June in 1982, so as to provide a warmer, more pleasant race weekend.
Parc Jean-Drapeau Montreal, Quebec
4.361 km
Race lap record 1:13.078
Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes AMG F1 W10 EQ Power+, 2019
circuit mont-tremblant
Circuit Mont-Tremblant is a 4.26 km race circuit about 13 km south of the village of Mont-Tremblant, Quebec, Canada. The name of the village of Saint-Jovite was often included in the name of the circuit, but since the village was amalgamated into Mont-Tremblant in the year 2000, it is no longer considered or functions as an independent entity.
The Canadian winters quickly rendered the track surface very bumpy and as a result, the attrition rate was quite high in the two Canadian Grand Prix Formula One events staged at the circuit. Of the 40 cars entered in those two races (20 each, in 1968 and 1970), 21 reached the checkered flag (with only 16 classified – the rest finishing too far behind the race winners).
Chemin du Village Mont-Tremblant, Quebec, Canada
4.265 km
Lap record 1:31.5
Jackie Stewart, Tyrrell 001, 1970
canadian tire motorsport park
Canadian Tire Motorsport Park (formerly Mosport Park and Mosport International Raceway) is a multi-track motorsport venue located north of Bowmanville, in Ontario, Canada, 64 km east of Toronto. The facility features a 3.957-kilometre, 10-turn road course; a 2.9-kilometre advance driver and race driver training facility with a 0.40-kilometre skid pad (Driver Development Centre) and a 1.5-kilometre kart track (Mosport Kartways). The name "Mosport", a portmanteau of Motor Sport, came from the enterprise formed to build the track.
Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada
3.957 km
Lap record 1:11.385
Mario Andretti, Lotus 78-Ford, 1977
autódromo hermanos rodríguez
The Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez is a 4.304 km motorsport race track in Mexico City, Mexico, named after the racing drivers Ricardo and Pedro Rodríguez. The circuit got its name shortly after it opened when Ricardo Rodríguez died in practice for the non-Championship 1962 Mexican Grand Prix. Ricardo's brother Pedro was also killed behind the wheel nine years later. Since 2015, the track has once again hosted the Formula One Mexican Grand Prix, an event it previously hosted in two separate periods on a different layout, the last occasion of which was in 1992.
Mexico City, Mexico
4.304 km
Race lap record 1:18.741
Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes AMG F1 W09 EQ Power+, 2018
autódromo internacional nelson piquet
The Autódromo Internacional Nelson Piquet (Nelson Piquet International RaceTrack), also known as Jacarepaguá after the neighbourhood in which it was located, and also as the Autódromo Riocentro, was a motorsport circuit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Opened in 1977, it hosted the Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix on ten occasions, and was also used for CART, motorcycle racing and stock car racing. In 2012, it was demolished to make way for facilities to be used at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
5.031 km
Race lap record 1:32.507
Riccardo Patrese, Williams-Renault FW12C, 1989
interlagos circuit
The Autódromo José Carlos Pace, better known as Interlagos, is a motorsport circuit located in the city of São Paulo, in the neighborhood of Interlagos. It was renamed after Brazilian Formula One driver Carlos Pace, who died in a plane crash in 1977. It has hosted the Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix since 1973. The land on which the circuit is located was originally bought in 1926 by property developers who wanted to build housing. Following difficulties partly due to the 1929 stock market crash, it was decided to build a racing circuit instead, construction started in 1938 and the track was inaugurated in May 1940. The design was based on New York's Roosevelt Field Raceway (1937 layout).
São Paulo, Brazil
4.309 km
Race lap record 1:10.540
Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes AMG F1 W09 EQ Power+, 2018
autódromo oscar y juan gálvez
The Autódromo de Buenos Aires Oscar y Juan Gálvez is a 45,000 capacity motor racing circuit in Buenos Aires, Argentina built in 1952 under president Juan Perón, named Autódromo 17 de Octubre after the date of Loyalty Day until Perón's overthrow. It was later renamed after Argentinian racing driver brothers, Juan Gálvez and Oscar Alfredo Gálvez. The circuit is located in a park in the southern part of the city and is situated on flat lands surrounded by large grandstands, giving most spectators an excellent view area of the whole circuit. Some races were run without the twisty infield section, reducing lap times significantly.
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