Las Vegas Review-Journal

Madrid to host F1 starting in 2026; in addition to banked turn, track could have indoor section

- By Tales Azzoni AP Sports Writer

MADRID — Formula One will return to Madrid after 45 years when the city stages the Spanish Grand Prix from 2026 on a hybrid track that will include a banked turn and potential indoor sections.

F1 president Stefano Domenicali was in Madrid for the lavish announceme­nt Tuesday of the 10-year deal that will bring the series back to the Madrid region.

The Spanish capital signed on with F1 until 2035. Barcelona’s current contract ends in 2026, but Domenicali said the race in Catalonia could remain on the calendar.

“The fact we are in Madrid is not excluding the fact we could stay in Barcelona for the future,” he said. “There are discussion­s in place to see if we can really extend our collaborat­ion with Barcelona, with whom we have a very good relationsh­ip.”

The Madrid circuit, subject to approval from the FIA, will include street and nonstreet sections around the city exhibition center, as well as F1’s first indoor paddock.

Track designer Jarno Zaffelli said they were still working on the track. He could not comment on possible changes to the design announced Tuesday, including racing through pavilions in the exhibition center. That was not in the current proposed layout.

The new 3.3-mile circuit, which won’t go near the city’s main tourist attraction­s, is expected to feature 20 corners, two tunnels and four passing zones. The F1 cars are expected to reach a top speed of 186 mph. The qualifying lap is expected to be 1 minute, 32 seconds.

The circuit will also include a paddock building, a new race tower, office spaces, VIP hospitalit­y and entertainm­ent areas.

The project will be organized by IFEMA, the leading fair operator in Spain, and will not involve public financing.

The exhibition center hosted the NATO summit in 2022 and was converted into a temporary hospital dedicated to COVID19 patients during the pandemic.

F1 said the venue was projected to have capacity for more than 110,000 fans per day across grandstand, general admission and VIP hospitalit­y. There were also plans to grow the circuit capacity to 140,000 per day over the first half of the contract, “making Madrid one of the largest venues on the F1 calendar.”

“Madrid is an incredible city with amazing sporting and cultural heritage, and today’s announceme­nt begins an exciting new chapter for F1 in Spain,” Domenicali said. “It truly epitomizes Formula One’s vision to create a multiday spectacle of sport and entertainm­ent that delivers maximum value for fans and embraces innovation and sustainabi­lity.”

Among those at the ceremony was Dakar Rally winner Carlos Sainz. He is the father of Ferrari driver Carlos Sainz. The other Spanish driver in F1 was two-time world champion Fernando Alonso.

The last F1 race in the Madrid region was in 1981 at the Jarama circuit. The Jerez de la Frontera track in southern Spain hosted races from 1986 to 1990, and in 1994 and 1997.

The country also hosted the European Grand Prix on a street circuit in Valencia from 2008 to 2012.

The contract with Barcelona was extended to 2026 five years ago after the track committed to improvemen­ts ahead of the 2022 season. The Barcelona-catalunya track has been hosting the Spanish GP since 1991.

Spanish media said there were negotiatio­ns between F1 and Barcelona to have Madrid taking its spot on the calendar in 2026. Barcelona organizers have said they hoped to extend their contract with F1 beyond 2026.

Red Bull driver Max Verstappen, winner of the inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix in November, won last year’s Spanish GP at the Circuit de Barcelona-catalunya.

 ?? MANU FERNANDEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Stefano Domenicali, CEO of Formula One Group, left, and Isabel Diaz Ayuso, president of the Madrid Regional Government, are seen prior to a news conference Tuesday announcing Madrid’s return to the F1 circuit beginning in 2026.
MANU FERNANDEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS Stefano Domenicali, CEO of Formula One Group, left, and Isabel Diaz Ayuso, president of the Madrid Regional Government, are seen prior to a news conference Tuesday announcing Madrid’s return to the F1 circuit beginning in 2026.

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