Circuit Paul Ricard

Circuit Paul Ricard
All layouts of Circuit Paul Ricard after 2019 pitlane extension
LocationLe Castellet, Var, France
Time zoneCET (UTC+1)
CEST (DST)
Coordinates43°15′2″N 5°47′30″E / 43.25056°N 5.79167°E / 43.25056; 5.79167
Capacity90,000
FIA Grade1 (5 layouts)
2 (2 layouts)
Broke groundJune 1969 (1969-06)
Opened19 April 1970 (1970-04-19)
Major eventsCurrent:
ELMS 4 Hours of Castellet
(2010–present)
GT World Challenge Europe
3 Hours of Paul Ricard (2012–present)
FIM EWC Bol d'Or (1978–1999, 2015–2019, 2021–present)
Ferrari Challenge Europe (2006–2010, 2015, 2017, 2022, 2024)
FFSA GT (1997, 2009, 2011–2015, 2017–present)
Former:
Formula One
French Grand Prix (Intermittently 1971–1990, 2018–2019, 2021–2022)
FIA Motorsport Games (2022)
WTCC Race of France (2014–2016)
Grand Prix motorcycle racing
French motorcycle Grand Prix
(Intermittently, 1973–1999)
FIA GT (2006, 2009)
Websitehttps://www.circuitpaulricard.com
Current layout with Mistral chicane (1C-V2)
(2005–present)
Length5.842 km (3.630 miles)
Turns15
Race lap record1:32.740 (Germany Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari SF90, 2019, F1)
Current layout without Mistral chicane (1A-V2)
(2005–present)
Length5.770 km (3.586 miles)
Turns13
Race lap record1:40.139 (Netherlands Nyck de Vries, Aurus 01, 2020, LMP2)
Short Circuit with Mistral chicane (3C)
(2002–present)
Length3.841 km (2.387 miles)
Turns11
Race lap record1:18.347 (Japan Kimiya Sato, Lola B05/52, 2014, Auto GP)
Short Grand Prix Circuit (1986–2001)
Length3.812 km (2.369 miles)
Turns9
Race lap record1:08.012 (United Kingdom Nigel Mansell, Ferrari 641, 1990, F1)
Original Grand Prix Circuit (1970–2001)
Length5.809 km (3.610 miles)
Turns14
Race lap record1:39.914 (Finland Keke Rosberg, Williams FW10, 1985, F1)
Original National Circuit (1970–2001)
Length3.263 km (2.028 miles)
Turns9
Race lap record1:15.800 (France Jean-Pierre Jabouille, Alpine A441, 1974, Group 5)

The Circuit Paul Ricard (French pronunciation: [siʁkɥi pɔl ʁikaʁ]) is a French motorsport race track built in 1969 at Le Castellet, Var, near Marseille, with finance from pastis magnate Paul Ricard. Ricard wanted to experience the challenge of building a racetrack. The circuit has hosted the FIA Formula One French Grand Prix intermittently from 1971 to 2022.


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