Fuji Speedway
{{F1 circuit|
Name = Fuji International Speedway |
Location =
Shizuoka Prefecture,
Japan | Image =
| Events =
Formula One |
Length_km = 4.563 |
Length_mi = 2.835 |
Turns = 10 |
Record_time = 1'14.30 min. 211.203 km/h|
Record_driver =
Jody Scheckter |
Record_team = Wolf-Ford |
Record_year =
1977Fuji Speedway is a
race track standing in the foothills of the
Mount Fuji, in
Shizuoka Prefecture,
Japan. It is a former
Formula One venue and was acquired by the
Toyota Motor Corporation in
2000.
The track was designed to be as a 4 km (2.5 mile) high-banked
superspeedway, but there was not enough money to complete the project and only one of the bankings was ever designed. Converted to a road course, the circuit opened in December of 1965 and proved to be somewhat dangerous with the banked turn regularly resulting in major accidents. A new part of track was built to counteract the problem, and the resultant 4.359 km (2.7 mi) course proved more successful. The speedway brought the first Formula 1 race to
Japan at the end of the 1976 season. The race had a dramatic World Championship battle between
James Hunt and
Niki Lauda, and in awful rainy conditions, Hunt earned enough points to win the title.
Mario Andretti won the race, with Lauda withdrawing due to the dangerous conditions.
There was less celebration after the second race in 1977 after
Gilles Villeneuve was involved in a crash that killed two people on the side of the track. It would be the second and last time the Fuji circuit would host a F1 race and when Japan earned another race on the F1 schedule 10 years later, it went to
Suzuka instead.
Fuji remained a popular
sports car racing venue and was often used for national races. Speeds continued to be very high, and two chicanes were added to the track, one just past the first hairpin corner, the second at the entry to the very long, very fast final turn (300R). But even with these changes the main feature of the track remained its 1.3 km long straightaway, one of the longest in all of motorsports.
The long pit straight also has also been utilised for
drag racing.
NHRA exhibitions were run in 1989, and in 1993
Shirley Muldowney ran a 5.30 on the quarter-mile strip at Fuji. Local drag races are common on the circuit.
The track continues to be used for Japanese national races, but plans to host a CART event in 1991 was abandoned and it was not until the autumn of 2000 that the track was bought by
Toyota, as part of its motor racing plans for the future.
In 2003 the circuit was closed down to accommodate a major reprofiling of the track, using a new design from
Hermann Tilke. The track was reopened on
10 April,
2005.
Toyota has now won its bid to host a Grand Prix event, replacing the
Suzuka Circuit as host to the
Japanese Grand Prix in the
2007 Formula One season.[
1]
The Fuji circuit is well known to fans of the
arcade racing game Pole Position, as cars raced on the circuit in the popular loop. Fuji Speedway was thus the first circuit ever to be featured in a video game.
Fuji is also featured in
Gran Turismo 4, where the circuit is available in its current (with or without the last chicane), 1974-85 and 1986-92 layouts; and in
TOCA Race Driver, in its 1993-2004 layout. The circuit was neither featured in
TOCA Race Driver 2 nor in
TOCA Race Driver 3.
*
List of Formula One circuits*
Fuji Speedway Official Site