Location | Nam Từ Liêm, Hanoi |
---|---|
Time zone | ICT ( UTC+07:00) |
Coordinates | 21°00′59.75″N 105°45′56.65″E / 21.0165972°N 105.7657361°E |
FIA Grade | 1 (intended) |
Architect | Hermann Tilke |
Grand Prix Circuit | |
Surface | Asphalt |
Length | 5.613 km (3.488 miles) |
Turns | 23 [1] |
The Hanoi Circuit [2] or Hanoi Street Circuit [3] ( Vietnamese: Trường đua đường phố Hà Nội [4]) is a motor racing venue located in the Nam Từ Liêm district of Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam. It is a street circuit designed to host the Vietnamese Grand Prix, a planned round of the Formula One World Championship. The circuit is 5.613 km (3.488 mi) long and was designed by circuit architect Hermann Tilke. [5]
The Hanoi Circuit was originally expected to make its debut on the Formula One calendar in 2020 with the inaugural Vietnamese Grand Prix, but the race was cancelled in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. [6] The planned next Formula One race on the circuit was also dropped from the 2021 calendar due to the arrest of Hanoi People's Committee Chairman Nguyễn Đức Chung, a key official responsible for the race, on corruption charges. [7]
The circuit, going anticlockwise, was located next to the Mỹ Đình National Stadium and consisted of a temporary street section and a purpose-built layout that was intended to be open to the public once completed. [8] It also features one of the longest straights on the calendar at 1.5 km (0.9 mi) in length. The purpose-built section drew inspiration from several existing circuits including the Circuit de Monaco, Suzuka Circuit, Sepang International Circuit and the Nürburgring "GP-Strecke". This philosophy of adapting corners from other circuits had previously been used in designing the layout of the Circuit of the Americas. [9]
The original layout consisted of 22 corners, but this was revised in December 2019 to include an additional corner in the third sector. The extra corner was added to improve safety. [1] Construction of the circuit was completed in February 2020. [10]
The circuit has been closed to the public since the cancellation of the planned Grand Prix, with the exception of between 31 December 2022 and 1 January 2023, when it hosted a Honda promotional event. [11] [12]