The Gold Coast Bulletin

F1 horsepower puts Cup out to pasture

- Angelica Snowden

Influencer­s, sports stars and corporates once flocked to the Birdcage at Melbourne’s Flemington Racecourse, where the Melbourne Cup was a must-attend gig on annual social calendars and the jewel in Victoria’s event crown.

But impossibly fast cars and daredevil drivers featuring on Netflix’s Drive to Survive have lifted the Formula One Australian Grand Prix, and businesses are flocking to capitalise on surging crowds and a fresh market in women.

Crown casino is opening a premium hospitalit­y suite called the 330 Club, where punters can watch F1 cars “thunder past at 330 km/h”, while the Paddock Club offers a viewing terrace above team garages on the starting line.

Along with the return of a Marriott Bonvoy hospitalit­y suite and St Kilda institutio­n the Esplanade Hotel hosting a pop-up bar – the Espy – there is no shortage of business interest in linking brands with the GP.

Ferrari Australasi­a CEO Jan Hendrik Voss said “public interest is leading corporate interest” in the event, with the racing house and car manufactur­er offering its own exclusive hospitalit­y suite, Casa Ferrari.

“There’s a strong public interest. I have friends that have teenage girls in high school, they know every driver by name, and it is a very big sport with a young crowd,” he said. “I think it’s shaping up to become the biggest and most exciting sports event in Australia on the calendar in any given year.

“And why wouldn’t corporates be interested in it? You have the fastest and most exciting racing in the world, right in your own backyard.”

Dr Voss said the GP could overtake the Australian Open tennis in popularity.

“I think F1 is on track, if it’s not already beating the Australian Open tennis tournament,” he said.

Middle Saturday at the Australian Open was the tournament’s busiest day, which clocked 93,723 fans this year. The busiest day at the GP in 2023 saw more than 131,000 fans flood Albert Park on race day, which is always Sunday.

Official records report 419,114 fans attended the Grand Prix over four days in 2022. That number was surpassed in 2023 when 444,631 punters were trackside.

As well, according to an Ernst and Young report on the event commission­ed by the Victorian Government, female spectators continue to grow.

“(in 2023) approximat­ely 39 per cent of ticket purchases (were) by females, which is comparable to 38 per cent in 2022 and considerab­ly above 24 per cent in 2019,” the report read.

Of Crown’s decision to set up the 330 Club at the GP, the company’s Melbourne CEO Mike Volkert said “it was a natural fit”.

“(Melbourne) is renowned for being an events-driven city. We’re one of the big cities of entertainm­ent globally,” he said. “It’s an incredible event, it keeps growing. This sport just seems to have a lot of momentum right now.”

One of the GP’s official partners, L’Oreal Australia and New Zealand, is partnering with the event for a third year and is keen to market its brands, including skincare La Roche Posay.

“Half a million people go through this experience of the Grand Prix. So it’s terrific, it’s local … and projects out to a global audience,” CEO Alex Davison said.

Mr Davison said another of the company’s fragrance brands, Ralph Lauren, was also a “good fit” for the GP.

“There’s a split of I think 60 per cent men, 40 women, so there’s a great demographi­c,” he said.

Asked why spectators were keen to spend on events like the GP despite a cost-of-living crisis, Mr Davison said events like these allow fans to “deposit” into their wellbeing.

“There is a sense of occasion that lifts everybody,” he said.

 ?? ?? The 2023 Grand Prix (above) drew 444,631 spectators, attracting brands such as Ferrari through its hospitalit­y suite Casa Ferrari (below). The Melbourne race is now on a par with the Melbourne Cup (right) and the Australian Open.
The 2023 Grand Prix (above) drew 444,631 spectators, attracting brands such as Ferrari through its hospitalit­y suite Casa Ferrari (below). The Melbourne race is now on a par with the Melbourne Cup (right) and the Australian Open.
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