Circuito do Estoril
{{Short description|Motorsport track in Portugal}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Motorsport venue
|Name = Autódromo Fernanda Pires da Silva
Estoril Circuit
|Location = Alcabideche, Cascais, Portugal
|Capacity = 45,000
|Time = WET (UTC+0)
WEST (April-October, UTC+1)
|Coordinates = {{Coord|38|45|3|N|9|23|39|W|display=inline,title}}
|Image = Image:Estoril track map.svg
|Image_caption = Grand Prix Circuit (2000–present)
|FIAGrade = 1 (Grand Prix)
3 (Tanque)
|Events = Current:
World SBK (1988, 1993, 2020–2022, 2024–present)
Sidecar World Championship (2019, 2021–present)
FIM JuniorGP (2017–present)
Porsche Cup Brasil (2011–2012, 2014, 2019, 2024–present)
Former:
Formula One
Portuguese Grand Prix (1984–1996)
Grand Prix motorcycle racing
Portuguese motorcycle Grand Prix (2000–2012)
FIM EWC
(1987, 2000, 2020–2021)
International GT Open (2006, 2008, 2015–2018, 2022)
European Le Mans Series
4 Hours of Estoril (2001, 2011, 2014–2016)
DTM (2004)
FIA WTCR Race of Portugal (2008, 2021)
FIA GT (2000–2003)
|Opened = {{Start date and age|df=yes|1972|06|17}}
|Owner = Parpública (February 2007–present)
|Former_names = Autódromo do Estoril
|Layout1 = Grand Prix Circuit (2000–present)
|Length_km = 4.182
|Length_mi = 2.599
|Turns = 14
|Record_time = 1:26.711
|Record_driver = {{flagicon|ESP}} Andy Soucek
|Record_car = Panoz DP09
|Record_year = 2008
|Record_class = Superleague Formula
|Layout2 = Tanque Circuit (2018–present)
|Length_km2 = 4.163
|Length_mi2 = 2.587
|Turns2 = 11
|Record_time2 = 1:35.895
|Record_driver2 = {{flagicon|POR}} Francisco Mora
|Record_car2 = Porsche 911 (991 II) GT3 Cup
|Record_year2 = 2023
|Record_class2 = Carrera Cup
|Layout3 = Grand Prix Circuit (1994–1999)
|Length_km3 = 4.360
|Length_mi3 = 2.725
|Turns3 = 13
|Record_time3 = 1:22.446
|Record_driver3 = {{flagicon|GBR}} David Coulthard
|Record_car3 = Williams FW16B
|Record_year3 = 1994
|Record_class3 = F1
|Layout4 = Superbike Circuit (1993)
|Length_km4 = 4.520
|Length_mi4 = 2.809
|Turns4 = 14
|Record_time4 = 1:52.186
|Record_driver4 = {{flagicon|GBR}} Carl Fogarty
|Record_car4 = Ducati 888 SBK
|Record_year4 = 1993
|Record_class4 = World SBK
|Layout5 = Grand Prix Circuit (1972–1993)
|Length_km5 = 4.349
|Length_mi5 = 2.703
|Turns5 = 11
|Record_time5 = 1:14.859
|Record_driver5 = {{flagicon|GBR}} Damon Hill
|Record_car5 = Williams FW15C
|Record_year5 = 1993
|Record_class5 = F1
|Layout6 = Perimeter Circuit (1972–1999)
|Length_km6 = 2.942
|Length_mi6 = 1.828
|Turns6 = 8
|Record_time6 = 0:58.450
|Record_driver6 = {{flagicon|AUS}} David Walker
|Record_car6 = GRD S73
|Record_year6 = 1973
|Record_class6 = Group 5
}}
The Circuito do Estoril or Autódromo do Estoril (Estoril Circuit), officially known as Autódromo Fernanda Pires da Silva, is a motorsport race track on the Portuguese Riviera, outside of Lisbon, owned by state-run holding management company Parpública. Its length is {{convert|4.182|km|mi|abbr=on}}. It was the home of the Formula One Portuguese Grand Prix from 1984 to 1996. The circuit has an FIA Grade 1 license.{{cite web|url=http://www.fia.com/sites/default/files/tableaulicencescircuit.pdf|title=LIST OF FIA LICENSED CIRCUITS|date=6 February 2015|publisher=FIA|access-date=28 May 2015}}
History
Estoril, a vacation-destination beach town located {{Convert|20|mi|km|adj=on|order=flip}} west of the Portuguese capital city of Lisbon has had motor racing dating back to the 1930s, with a {{convert|2.8|km|mi|abbr=on}} street circuit used in 1937 for a local race. The current Estoril circuit was built and completed in 1972 on a rocky plateau near the village of Alcabideche, {{convert|9|km|mi|adj=on}} from Estoril, the town lending its name to the circuit. The course has two hairpin turns, noticeable elevation changes, and a long {{cvt|0.986|km|mi|abbr=on}} start/finish straight. Its original perimeter was {{convert|4.349|km|mi|abbr=on}}, and the maximum gradient is nearly 7%.{{cite web|url=http://www.circuito-estoril.pt/en/technical-information/track-data/|title=TRACK DATA - Circuito Estoril - Portugal|last=Seara.com|website=www.circuito-estoril.pt|access-date=17 May 2015|archive-date=2 April 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100402225803/http://www.circuito-estoril.pt/en/technical-information/track-data/|url-status=dead}} Monsanto Park, another street circuit in Lisbon hosted a variety of motor racing events in the 1950s, including the 1959 Portuguese Grand Prix, an event it shared briefly with the Boavista street circuit in Porto.
Its first years saw many national races, as well as an occasional Formula 2 race. However, the course soon fell into disrepair due to the owning company having been taken over by the state between 1975 and 1978, and a significant redevelopment effort was needed before international motorsport returned in 1984. In the 1980s, the Rally de Portugal also had a special stage at the circuit.{{cite web |title=Estoril - Racing Circuits |url=http://www.racingcircuits.info/europe/portugal/estoril.html |website=RacingCircuits.info |access-date=21 July 2022}}{{cite web |title=History - Circuito Estoril - Portugal |url=http://www.circuito-estoril.pt/en/fan-info/history/ |last=Seara.com |website=www.circuito-estoril.pt}}
Estoril became a popular event on the F1 calendar, the setting for many well-known moments including Niki Lauda winning the {{F1|1984}} championship, his third and final, from McLaren teammate Alain Prost by just half a point by finishing second to Prost at the 1984 Portuguese Grand Prix; three-time world champion Ayrton Senna's first F1 win in 1985; Nigel Mansell's notorious black flag incident and subsequent collision with Senna in 1989; Riccardo Patrese being launched airborne in a near-backward flip after colliding with Gerhard Berger on the main straight in 1992; and Jacques Villeneuve overtaking Michael Schumacher around the outside of the final turn in 1996.
Throughout the years, Estoril has had numerous problems with safety, failing safety inspections on more than one occasion. After the death of Ayrton Senna at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix, a chicane was added which increased the circuit length to {{convert|4.360|km|mi|abbr=on}}. Estoril sometimes has strong winds. Many teams were fond of using Estoril for winter testing.
Estoril was dropped from the F1 calendar for the 1997 season, though it continued to play host to top-level single-seater, sports car and touring car events, including the FIA GT Championship, the DTM and the World Series by Renault.{{cite news|url=http://www.race-game.org/caterham/tracks.htm|title=The New Tracks|publisher=race-game.org|year=2006|access-date=16 November 2009|archive-date=16 April 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090416125746/http://www.race-game.org/caterham/tracks.htm|url-status=dead}} A new redesign of the parabolica turn which saw its length reduced to {{convert|4.182|km|mi|abbr=on}} was implemented in 2000 in order to obtain FIM homologation.
On 3 September 2000, the Autódromo do Estoril held its first Portuguese motorcycle Grand Prix, an event held annually. On 23 October 2005, the circuit hosted the third round of the first ever A1 Grand Prix racing season, with both races in the event being won by the French team. The track hosted Superleague Formula series events in 2008 and 2009.
In 2020, due to rescheduling of major international sport series due to COVID-19 pandemic, Estoril hosted the final race of 2020 Superbike World Championship (after hosting the series in 1988 and 1993) and the final race of 2019–20 FIM Endurance World Championship (after hosting the series in 1987 and 2000).
Layout history
{{Gallery
| title = Circuito do Estoril Layout History
| align = center
| footer =
| style = text-align:center;
| mode = packed
| File:Circuito_de_Estoril_1972-1993.png
| Grand Prix Circuit (1972–1993)
| File:Autódromo_de_Estoril_1994-1999.png
| Grand Prix Circuit (1994–1999)
| File:Estoril track map.svg
| Grand Prix Circuit (2000–present)
}}
Lap records
As of May 2025, the fastest official race lap records at the Circuito do Estoril are listed as:
Events
; Current
- January: GT Winter Series, GT4 Winter Series, Prototype Winter Series
- February: Porsche Sprint Challenge Southern Europe
- April: Sidecar World Championship
- May: FIM JuniorGP World Championship, FIM Moto2 European Championship, European Talent Cup
- July: Estoril Summer Party
- August: Porsche Cup Brasil
- September: {{ill|Campeonato de España de Superbike|es|ESBK}}
- October: Superbike World Championship, Classic Endurance Racing Estoril Classics, Supersport World Championship, Supersport 300 World Championship
- November: Campeonato Portugal de Velocidade Estoril Endurance Festival
; Former
- 24H Series
- 12 Hours of Estoril (2023)
- A1 Grand Prix (2005)
- Auto GP (2004, 2014)
- Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters (2004)
- EFDA Nations Cup (1992–1993)
- Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 (1999, 2001, 2005, 2007–2008, 2016)
- Eurocup Mégane Trophy (2005, 2007–2008)
- Eurocup-3 (2023)
- Euroformula Open Championship (2001–2007, 2015–2018, 2022)
- European Formula Two Championship (1975–1977)
- European Le Mans Series
- 4 Hours of Estoril (2011, 2014–2016)
- European Touring Car Championship (1977–1978, 1985–1988, 2001–2003)
- European Touring Car Cup (2006)
- European Truck Racing Cup (2003)
- F4 Spanish Championship (2017, 2023)
- Ferrari Challenge Europe (2023)
- FIA GT Championship (2000–2003)
- FIA Sportscar Championship
- FIA Sportscar Championship Estoril (2002–2003)
- FIM Endurance World Championship
- 12 Hours of Estoril (1987, 2000, 2020–2021)
- FIM Women's Motorcycling World Championship (2024)
- Formula Chrysler Euroseries (2001)
- Formula 3 Euro Series (2004)
- Formula One
- Portuguese Grand Prix (1984–1996)
- Formula Renault 2.0 West European Cup (1987, 1999, 2001, 2008)
- Formula Renault 3.5 Series (2005, 2007–2008)
- French Formula Three Championship (1972)
- Grand Prix motorcycle racing
- Portuguese motorcycle Grand Prix (2000–2012)
- GT3 Le Mans Cup (2016)
- IMSA European Le Mans Series
- Estoril 1000km (2001)
- International Formula 3000 (1985, 1994–1996)
- International GT Open (2006, 2008, 2015–2018, 2022)
- International Touring Car Championship (1995–1996)
- Italian Formula Renault Championship (2001)
- Porsche Supercup (1994, 1996)
- Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup (2007–2008, 2011–2012)
- Renault Sport Trophy (2016)
- SEAT León Eurocup (2008, 2015–2016)
- Stock Car Brasil (1982)
- Superleague Formula
- Superleague Formula round Portugal (2008–2009)
- TCR International Series (2016)
- {{ill|TCR Spain Touring Car Championship|es|TCR Spain}} (2017, 2023–2024)
- Ultimate Cup Series (2019, 2021, 2023)
- V de V Series (2007–2018)
- World Series by Nissan (2001, 2004)
- World Touring Car Championship
- FIA WTCC Race of Portugal (2008)
- World Touring Car Cup
- FIA WTCR Race of Portugal (2021)
Major event winners
= Motorcycling - Portuguese Grand Prix =
class="wikitable"
! rowspan="2" |Year ! rowspan="2" |Track ! colspan="2" |Moto3 ! colspan="2" |Moto2 ! colspan="2" |MotoGP ! rowspan="2" |Report |
Rider
!Manufacturer !Rider !Manufacturer !Rider !Manufacturer |
---|
2012
|{{Flagicon|Germany}} Sandro Cortese |KTM |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Marc Márquez |{{Flagicon|Australia}} Casey Stoner |
rowspan="2" |Year
! rowspan="2" |Track ! colspan="2" |125 cc ! colspan="2" |Moto2 ! colspan="2" |MotoGP ! rowspan="2" |Report |
Rider
!Manufacturer !Rider !Manufacturer !Rider !Manufacturer |
2011
|{{Flagicon|Spain}} Nicolás Terol |{{Flagicon|Germany}} Stefan Bradl |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Dani Pedrosa |
2010
|{{Flagicon|Spain}} Marc Márquez |{{Flagicon|Germany}} Stefan Bradl |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Jorge Lorenzo |
rowspan="2" |Year
! rowspan="2" |Track ! colspan="2" |125 cc ! colspan="2" |250 cc ! colspan="2" |MotoGP ! rowspan="2" |Report |
Rider
!Manufacturer !Rider !Manufacturer !Rider !Manufacturer |
2009
|{{Flagicon|Spain}} Pol Espargaró |{{Flagicon|Italy}} Marco Simoncelli |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Jorge Lorenzo |
2008
|{{Flagicon|Italy}} Simone Corsi |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Álvaro Bautista |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Jorge Lorenzo |
2007
|{{Flagicon|Spain}} Héctor Faubel |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Álvaro Bautista |{{Flagicon|Italy}} Valentino Rossi |
2006
|{{Flagicon|Spain}} Álvaro Bautista |{{Flagicon|Italy}} Andrea Dovizioso |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Toni Elías |
2005
|{{Flagicon|Finland}} Mika Kallio |KTM |{{Flagicon|Australia}} Casey Stoner |{{Flagicon|Brazil}} Alex Barros |
2004
|{{Flagicon|Spain}} Héctor Barberá |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Toni Elías |{{Flagicon|Italy|2003}} Valentino Rossi |
2003
|{{Flagicon|Spain}} Pablo Nieto |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Toni Elías |{{Flagicon|Italy|2003}} Valentino Rossi |
2002
|{{Flagicon|France}} Arnaud Vincent |{{Flagicon|Spain}} Fonsi Nieto |{{Flagicon|Italy|1946}} Valentino Rossi |
rowspan="2" |Year
! rowspan="2" |Track ! colspan="2" |125 cc ! colspan="2" |250 cc ! colspan="2" |500 cc ! rowspan="2" |Report |
Rider
!Manufacturer !Rider !Manufacturer !Rider !Manufacturer |
2001
|{{Flagicon|San Marino|1862}} Manuel Poggiali |{{Flagicon|Japan}} Daijiro Kato |{{Flagicon|Italy|1946}} Valentino Rossi |
2000
|{{Flagicon|Spain}} Emilio Alzamora |{{Flagicon|Japan}} Daijiro Kato |{{Flagicon|Australia}} Garry McCoy |
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{reflist|2}}
External links
{{Commons category|Autódromo do Estoril}}
- [https://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=Estoril,+Portugal&ie=UTF8&z=15&ll=38.750234,-9.394598&spn=0.015797,0.043259&t=k&om=1 Satellite picture at Google Maps.]
- {{Official website|http://www.circuito-estoril.pt/}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20090429122157/http://www.audiotrackguides.co.uk/ Audio walkthrough of the track, for use with games.]
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