Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez | |
Former Names: | Autódromo Magdalena Mixhuca (1959–1979) |
Location: | Mexico City, Mexico |
Coordinates: | 19.4061°N -99.0925°W |
Time: | UTC−6 / UTC−5 (DST) |
Fiagrade: | 1 (GP) 3E (Formula E) |
Broke Ground: | 1959 |
Events: | Current: Formula One Mexican Grand Prix (1962–1970, 1986–1992, 2015–2019) Mexico City Grand Prix (2021–present) FIA Formula E Championship Mexico City ePrix (2016–2020, 2022–present) NASCAR Mexico Series (2004–2019, 2022–present) Former: FIA WEC 6 Hours of Mexico (1989–1991, 2016–2017) NASCAR Xfinity Series Corona México 200 (2005–2008) Race of Champions (2019) Trans-Am Series (1978–1979, 1991) CART/Champ Car World Series Gran Premio Tecate (1980–1981, 2002–2007) Grand Am Rolex Sports Car Series Mexico City 400k (2005–2008) A1 Grand Prix (2007–2008) IMSA GT Championship (1974) USRRC (1968) |
Capacity: | 110,000 |
Layout1: | Grand Prix Circuit (2015–present) |
Length Km: | 4.304[1] |
Length Mi: | 2.674 |
Turns: | 17 |
Record Time: | 1:17.774 |
Record Driver: | Valtteri Bottas |
Record Car: | Mercedes W12 |
Record Year: | 2021 |
Record Class: | F1 |
Layout2: | Formula E Circuit (2023–present) |
Length Km2: | 2.628 |
Length Mi2: | 1.633 |
Turns2: | 19 |
Record Time2: | 1:14.195 |
Record Driver2: | Jake Dennis |
Record Car2: | Porsche 99X Electric |
Record Year2: | 2023 |
Record Class2: | Formula E |
Layout3: | Oval Circuit (1962–present) |
Surface3: | Asphalt |
Length Km3: | 1.609 |
Length Mi3: | 1.000 |
Turns3: | 4 |
Record Time3: | 0:32.081 |
Record Driver3: | Antonio Pérez |
Record Car3: | Toyota Camry NASCAR |
Record Year3: | 2015 |
Record Class3: | Stock car racing |
Layout4: | Formula E Circuit (2020–2022) |
Length Km4: | 2.606 |
Length Mi4: | 1.619 |
Turns4: | 16 |
Record Time4: | 1:09.487 |
Record Driver4: | Lucas di Grassi |
Record Car4: | Mercedes-EQ Silver Arrow 02 |
Record Year4: | 2022 |
Record Class4: | Formula E |
Layout5: | Original Formula E Circuit (2016–2019) |
Length Km5: | 2.093 |
Length Mi5: | 1.300 |
Turns5: | 17 |
Record Time5: | 1:01.112 |
Record Driver5: | Pascal Wehrlein |
Record Car5: | Mahindra M5Electro |
Record Year5: | 2019 |
Record Class5: | Formula E |
Layout6: | Grand Prix Circuit (1986–2014) |
Surface6: | Asphalt |
Length Km6: | 4.421 |
Length Mi6: | 2.747 |
Turns6: | 14 |
Record Time6: | 1:16.788 |
Record Driver6: | Nigel Mansell |
Record Car6: | Williams FW14 |
Record Year6: | 1991 |
Record Class6: | F1 |
Layout7: | Champ Car/A1GP Grand Prix Circuit (2006–2007) |
Surface7: | Asphalt |
Length Km7: | 4.463 |
Length Mi7: | 2.774 |
Turns7: | 17 |
Record Time7: | 1:24.713 |
Record Driver7: | Robert Doornbos |
Record Car7: | Panoz DP01 |
Record Year7: | 2007 |
Record Class7: | Champ Car |
Layout8: | NASCAR Circuit (2005–2014) |
Surface8: | Asphalt |
Length Km8: | 4.053 |
Length Mi8: | 2.518 |
Turns8: | 16 |
Record Time8: | 1:20.521 |
Record Driver8: | Alex Gurney |
Record Car8: | Riley Mk XX |
Record Year8: | 2008 |
Record Class8: | DP |
Layout9: | CART/Champ Car Grand Prix Circuit (2002–2005) |
Surface9: | Asphalt |
Length Km9: | 4.484 |
Length Mi9: | 2.786 |
Turns9: | 17 |
Record Time9: | 1:27.248 |
Record Driver9: | Shinji Nakano |
Record Car9: | Lola B02/00 |
Record Year9: | 2002 |
Record Class9: | CART |
Layout10: | Original Grand Prix Circuit (1959–1985) |
Surface10: | Asphalt |
Length Km10: | 5.000 |
Length Mi10: | 3.107 |
Turns10: | 14 |
Record Time10: | 1:43.050 |
Record Driver10: | Jacky Ickx |
Record Car10: | Brabham BT26A |
Record Year10: | 1969 |
Record Class10: | F1 |
Layout11: | Original Short Circuit (1959–1985) |
Surface11: | Asphalt |
Length Km11: | 3.991 |
Length Mi11: | 2.480 |
Turns11: | 10 |
Record Time11: | 1:17.631 |
Record Car11: | Ralt RT4 |
Record Year11: | 1982 |
Record Class11: | Formula Atlantic |
The Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez is a 4.304km (02.674miles) motorsport race track in Mexico City, Mexico, named after the racing drivers Ricardo Rodríguez (1942–1962) and Pedro Rodríguez (1940–1971). 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.
The circuit is located within the public park of the Magdalena Mixhuca Sports City in southeast Mexico City. The circuit is owned by the Government of the City, but is currently operated under concession by Corporación Interamericana de Entretenimiento (CIE) through OCESA, one of CIE's subsidiaries. CIE also organizes the NASCAR and Desafío Corona races in this circuit and rents the circuits to other parties, including race organizers, automobile clubs and track amateurs for fees that are controversial due to their disproportionately high amounts compared to other ex-F1 courses.
The NASCAR Xfinity Series started racing at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in the 2005 season and ended in the 2008 season. Martin Truex Jr. won the race in 2005, and Denny Hamlin won in 2006. For the 2007 race, the chicane was removed to increase passing opportunities down the front straight and into turn 1, and Juan Pablo Montoya from Bogotá, Colombia, won the race. Kyle Busch was the winner of the race in 2008.
The A1 Grand Prix series started racing at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in the 2006–07 season using the full-track configuration used by Formula One. Alex Yoong from Malaysia won the sprint race and Oliver Jarvis from the United Kingdom won the feature race. In the 2007–08 season, Jonny Reid from New Zealand won the sprint race and Adam Carroll of Team Ireland won the feature race.
Built in the Magdalena Mixhuca public park in 1959, the circuit hosted its first Formula One Grand Prix in 1962, as a non-Championship race. The following year the Mexican Grand Prix became a full World Championship event. The circuit remained part of the F1 calendar through 1970, when spectator overcrowding caused unsafe conditions. When F1 returned in 1986, the circuit boasted a new pit complex, as well as improved safety all around, but left again after 1992 due to safety concerns.
In 2001 CIE and Forsythe Racing tasked D3 Motorsport Development with revamping the circuit. A redesign to include the Foro and a complete upgrade of the circuit was done. It saw a record crowd of 402,413 people attend a round of the CART Championship in 2002.
It was announced in May 2012, that the circuit would again host the Mexican Grand Prix from 2013, in a five-year deal that would see it replace the European Grand Prix in Valencia,[2] but this did not happen. The FIA listed the Mexican Grand Prix as the 19th round of the provisional schedule for the 2014 season,[3] but it was not on the final schedule. The Mexican Grand Prix was listed on the 2015 Formula One calendar published by the FIA on 3 December 2014, with Formula One making its return to the circuit with the race on 1 November 2015.[4]
The racetrack is also home to Electric Daisy Carnival (EDC Mexico), a music festival attended by over 200,000 people.[5]
Designed as his thesis by student Óscar Fernández in 1953,[6] the circuit has an elevation of 2,238 m (7,342 ft); the thin air causes difficulties for both the drivers and their cars. It also reduces the levels of aerodynamic drag that cars experience, meaning that higher downforce setups can be used with less impact on straight-line speed.[7]
The circuit has an extremely fast final corner (the Peraltada, turn 17) before a long start/finish straight, and thus reminded some of Monza; however, unlike Monza's Parabolica curve, the Peraltada curve is slightly banked, allowing even more speed through the corner. It was at this corner that the younger Rodríguez crashed, due to suspension failure. After the last F1 Mexican Grand Prix in 1992, a baseball stadium called the "Foro" was built on the inner part of this curve. When the Champ Car series began using the track in 2002, the Peraltada curve was partially bypassed by a series of sharp turns entering and exiting the Foro; re-entering the Peraltada halfway through.
After the Peraltada comes the long 1.2 km front straight. During the original turbo era in Formula One the faster cars were regularly clocking speeds of up to 3300NaN0 on the straight.
In the 2005 NASCAR Busch Series season, there was a chicane on the main straightaway to slow the cars down. They also introduced a curve between the short course and the Ese del Lago to bypass the latter, but avoiding the stadium detour.
The Grand Prix circuit underwent a significant renovation under the direction of Hermann Tilke for the return of Formula One in . The front straight was slightly extended and reprofiled to accommodate a new media center and paddock. The iconic esses between turns 7 and 13 were significantly modified; the prolific, high radius turns largely diminished and some replaced with fixed angle turns. The baseball field portion of the track was also altered to a low-speed left-right combination that bypassed the first half of the Peraltada, allowing the cars to re-enter the Peraltada halfway through the corner. At 4.304km (02.674miles), the course is 170m (560feet) shorter than the previous Grand Prix layout, and Mexican Grand Prix organizers predicted lap times of around 75 seconds and speeds in excess of 3280NaN0 for the current turbocharged Formula One cars, which eliminate the adverse effects of altitude present in naturally aspirated cars. However, the modern V6 hybrid turbo Formula One cars actually managed to reach top speeds in excess of 3700NaN0 down the main straight.
The maximum speed recorded in a Formula One car was, established at the end of the start/finish straight.[8]
The circuit also features an oval layout due to the inclusion of a flat turn that goes from the middle of the main straight to the beginning of the backstretch of circuit. Unlike the road course, the oval is raced in counter-clockwise direction (except for the Formula E race).
The oval configuration of this Mexico City facility is arguably the most dangerous racetrack in Mexico, because of the limited visibility at the exit of turns 2 and 4. This is because the Foro Sol baseball stadium is located inside turns 1 and 2; and several trees are located inside turns 3 and 4.
During the 2006 season, two accidents occurred in the oval track during NASCAR Mexico T4 Series events, which took several drivers out of the race, with some needing hospital treatment.
The oval configuration is used at least twice a year, with two double-feature events featuring the NASCAR Toyota Series and the NASCAR Mexico T4 Series.
The oval configuration also forms the base of the FIA Formula E Championship circuit for the Mexico City ePrix; the oval is raced clockwise, but there is a chicane prior to the entrance of turn 4, with a second chicane on the backstretch, followed by a modified Foro Sol section that exits for the full Peraltada, and a third chicane midway through the Peraltada (turns 1 and 2 of the oval). FIA Formula E track design was modified by Agustin Delicado Zomeño. Starting from season 3 (2016–2017), the first chicane is removed and now it is a right-hand corner.
In season 6, the track is extended and the two chicanes at the back straight and the Peraltada are removed. The track also uses more of the Formula 1 layout. After turn 2 (Formula E track), the track will turn left instead of right and the extended part includes a 4-turn sequence before going back to the original circuit and the stadium section.
Before the 1986 Formula One race, the first turn (now turns 1-3) was named in honour of Moisés Solana, Mexico's third F1 driver. It is still called Ese Moisés Solana, often referred to as the "Solana Complex" in English.
In September 2002, Mexico's fourth and, then most recent, F1 driver Héctor Rebaque's achievements both in F1 and CART were recognized by renaming turn 6 of the Autodromo as Recorte Rebaque instead of the previous name of Recorte de Gran Premio.
In 2015, turn 17 was named in honour of Nigel Mansell, twice winner of the Mexican Grand Prix in 1987 and 1992 and the scene of his daring pass around the outside of Gerhard Berger in 1990.[9]
On September 20, 2016 Adrián Fernández's achievements have been recognized by the naming of turn 12 of the Autodromo in his honour.[10]
The official lap record for the current circuit layout is 1:17.774, set by Valtteri Bottas driving for Mercedes in the 2021 Mexico City Grand Prix, while the unofficial all-time track record is 1:14.758, set by Max Verstappen driving for Red Bull Racing in the qualifying of the 2019 Mexican Grand Prix. As of April 2024, the fastest official race lap records at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez are listed as:
Category | Time | Driver | Vehicle | Event |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grand Prix Circuit with Foro Sol: 4.304 km (2015–present)[11] [12] [13] | ||||
1:17.774 | Mercedes-AMG W12 E Performance | 2021 Mexico City Grand Prix | ||
1:25.730[14] | 2017 6 Hours of Mexico | |||
1:32.144[15] | 2017 Mexico City Formula V8 round | |||
1:33.670 | 2017 6 Hours of Mexico | |||
1:40.212 | 2017 6 Hours of Mexico | |||
1:43.593[16] | 2018 2nd Mexico City Porsche Supercup round | |||
1:46.087[17] | 2017 2nd Mexico City NACAM F4 round | |||
Grand Prix Circuit without Foro Sol: 4.256 km (2015–present) | ||||
1:40.562[18] | Pedro Juan Moreno | 2023 1st Mexico City NACAM F4 round | ||
Formula E Circuit: 2.628 km (2023–present) | ||||
1:14.195[19] | 2023 Mexico City ePrix | |||
National Circuit with Foro Sol: 3.909 km (2015–present) | ||||
1:33.010[20] | 2016 1st Mexico City NACAM F4 round | |||
National Circuit without Foro Sol: 3.850 km (2015–present) | ||||
1:27.262[21] | Honda Civic Type R TCR (FL5)[22] | 2024 1st Mexico City TCR Mexico round | ||
Vintage Circuit: 2.844 km (2020–present)[23] [24] | ||||
1:18.538[25] | 2022 1st Mexico City NACAM F4 round | |||
Oval Circuit with Foro Sol: 1.665 km (2015–present) | ||||
0:44.395[26] | 2017 Gran Premio FedEx | |||
Oval Circuit: 1.609 km (1959–present) | ||||
0:32.081[27] | 2015 Alcatel OneTouch 240 | |||
0:41.510[28] | 2015 Mexico City Fórmula Panam round | |||
Formula E Circuit: 2.606 km (2020–2022) | ||||
1:09.487 | 2022 Mexico City ePrix | |||
1:25.045[29] | 2020 Mexico City Jaguar I-Pace eTrophy round | |||
Original Formula E Circuit: 2.093 km (2016–2019) | ||||
1:01.112 | 2019 Mexico City ePrix | |||
1:15.516[30] | 2019 Mexico City Jaguar I-Pace eTrophy round | |||
Modified Grand Prix Circuit: 4.421 km (1986–2014) | ||||
1:16.788 | 1991 Mexican Grand Prix | |||
1:21.611[31] | 1991 430 km of Mexico City | |||
1:21.753[32] | 1999 2nd Monterrey Mexican F3 round | |||
1:31.929[33] | 1989 480 km of Mexico | |||
National Circuit: 4.000 km (1986–2014) | ||||
1:15.386[34] | 2000 2nd Mexico City Fórmula de las Américas round | |||
1:16.005 | 1997 2nd Mexico City Mexican F3000 round | |||
1:16.751[35] | 1997 1st Mexico City Mexican F3 round | |||
1:18.287[36] | 2012 Mexico City Panam GP round | |||
NASCAR Circuit: 4.053 km (2005–2014) | ||||
1:20.521[37] | 2008 Mexico City 250 | |||
1:27.458 | 2007 Telcel-Motorola Mexico 200 | |||
A1GP Grand Prix Circuit (NASCAR Circuit with chicane): 4.084 km (2008)[38] | ||||
1:21.417 | 2007–08 A1 Grand Prix of Nations, Mexico | |||
Champ Car/A1GP Grand Prix Circuit (Modified Grand Prix Circuit with chicane): 4.463 km (2006–2007) | ||||
1:24.713 | 2007 Gran Premio Tecate | |||
1:27.534[39] | 2006–07 A1 Grand Prix of Nations, Mexico | |||
CART/Champ Car Grand Prix Circuit (Modified Grand Prix Circuit with Foro Sol): 4.484 km (2002–2005) | ||||
1:27.248 | 2002 Gran Premio Telmex-Gigante | |||
1:28.479 | 2005 Gran Premio Telmex/Tecate | |||
1:45.331[40] | 2005 Mexico City 250 | |||
1:48.798[41] | 2004 Mexico City Formula Renault 2000 America round | |||
1:54.099 | 2005 Mexico City 250 | |||
Original Grand Prix Circuit: 5.000 km (1959–1985) | ||||
1:43.050 | 1969 Mexican Grand Prix | |||
1:48.910[42] | 1968 Mexico City USRRC round | |||
Original Short Circuit: 3.991 km (1959–1985) | ||||
1:17.631[43] | 1982 Mexico City Formula Atlantic round | |||
See main article: Foro Sol.
The Autódromo includes a baseball stadium inside turn 14 (Peraltada). The stadium, called Foro Sol, was home to the Diablos Rojos del México and also hosts music concerts. Some of the artists who played there include Iron Maiden, Paul McCartney, Britney Spears, Metallica, Pink Floyd, Santana, Lady Gaga, The Rolling Stones, Madonna, Taylor Swift, Stone Temple Pilots, Nine Inch Nails, Shakira, U2, Radiohead, and Guns N' Roses. The Diablos Rojos later left Foro Sol in order to build a new baseball stadium named Estadio Alfredo Harp Helú, which was later completed on 23 March 2019. Unlike Foro Sol, it was built inside of the race track near turns 1 and 3.[44] [45]