The 'Hockenheimring Baden-Württemberg' is an
automobile racing track situated near the town of
Hockenheim in
Baden-Württemberg,
Germany. Amongst other motor racing events, it holds the annual
Formula One German Grand Prix. Situated in the
Rhine valley, the circuit is completely flat, without any changes in elevation.
History
1930s - 1960s
Hockenheimring was originally built in 1932 using roads in the forest as an alternative to the Wildpark-Circuit in Karlsruhe, which became forbidden as a racing circuit by German officials. It was used for motorcycle racing and was expanded to be used as test track for
Mercedes-Benz and
Auto Union in 1936. In 1938 it was renamed the ''Kurpfalzring'' and that name was used until
1947. After the war,
Grand Prix motorcycle racing events were held, with the
German motorcycle Grand Prix alternating between Hockenheim and other tracks.
The original circuit was almost eight kilometres long and consisted of two long straights with a long "Eastern" corner in the forest and a U-turn inside Hockenheim joining them together.
1960s - 2000s
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Hockenheimring - 1980s and 2000s version
In 1965, when the new
Autobahn A 6 separated the village from the main part of the track, a new version of Hockenheim circuit was built, with the "Motodrom" stadium section. After
Jim Clark was killed in 1968 in a
Formula 2 racing accident, two
chicanes and an
armco were added. In 1980, another chicane was added at the Ostkurve (''east curve''), after
Patrick Depailler was killed there.
This version used to be quite large, with a very long, fast section going through forests essentially consisting of four straights of roughly 1.3 km, separated by a chicane sequence, followed by a more tight and twisty "stadium" section (so called because of all the grandstands situated there) named ''Motodrom''. This made setting racing cars up difficult, as a choice had to be made - whether to run low
downforce to optimise speed through the straights and compromise grip in the stadium section, or vice-versa.
2000s
In the early 2000s, F1 officials demanded the 6.8 km track be shortened and threatened to discontinue racing there, due to competition from other tracks such as the
EuroSpeedway Lausitz and sites in Asia. The state government of
Baden-Württemberg secured the financing of the redesign by
Hermann Tilke for the
2002 German Grand Prix. The stadium section remained mostly intact, despite a new surface and a tighter Turn 1 ("Nordkurve"). However, the circuit was dramatically shortened, with the long, sweeping forest section chopped off in favour of more tight corners. There was a great deal of criticism of the track redesign, however, the tight hairpin following the very long back straight offers an overtaking possibility.
The tracks has a seating capacity of 120,000, due to new large grandstands sponsored by
Mercedes-Benz.
The complex also features a
quarter mile track for
drag racing. It hosts one of the largest drag racing events in Europe known as the ''
Nitro Olympics''.
Formula 1
The Hockenheim Circuit hosted the ''
German Grand Prix'' for the first time in 1970 when the F1 drivers decided at the
French Grand Prix to boycott the
Nürburgring unless major changes were made. The next year the German Grand Prix went back to the Nürburgring until the
1976 German Grand Prix. From to , the Hockenheimring hosted the German Grand Prix with the exception of
1985, when the race was held at the Nürburgring.
In
July 2006,
Bernie Ecclestone announced that from 2007 onwards, there would be only one Grand Prix per year in Germany. (Since , there had been two Grands Prix every year in Germany; the
German Grand Prix at Hockenheim, plus either the
European Grand Prix or the
Luxembourg Grand Prix at the Nürburgring.) From 2007 onwards, the Nürburgring and Hockenheimring will alternate hosting the German Grand Prix, starting with the Nürburgring in 2007.
Deaths from crashes
★ 1968
Jim Clark, during a Formula 2 race.
★ 1972
Bert Hawthorne, during a Formula 2 race.
★ 1980
Patrick Depailler, during a private test session.
External links
★
Hockenheimring
★
Hockenheimring Circuit History and Statistics
★
Circuit profile on Formula1.com
★
Onboard video of one lap (QT, 10,4 MB)
★
Hockenheim Short Power Laps
★
Ciro Pabón's Racetracks 3D views and virtual laps of all Motorsport venues, including this one, via Google Earth
★
Satellite picture by Google Maps (As of April 2007, this still shows the pre-2002 circuit)