Autopolis

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Autopolis Circuit
Autopolis racing circuit.
Location Kamitsue village, in
Hita City, Ōita Prefecture, Japan
Owner Tomonori Tsurumaki
(former owner and founder)
Hazama
Opened 1990
Construction Cost ¥47 billion
Architect Yoshitoshi Sakurai
Major Events D1 Grand Prix
Super GT (JGTC)
(MFJ Superbikes)
All Japan Road Race Championship

Formula Nippon
Japanese F3
Full Circuit
Circuit Length 4.574 km (2.842 mi)
Main Circuit
Circuit Length 3.022 km (1.877 mi)
Lakeside Circuit
Circuit Length 1.761 km (1.094 mi)

Autopolis (オートポリス) is an international racing circuit located near Kamitsue village in Ōita Prefecture. Opened in 1990, it hosts a range of domestic and international motorsport events throughout the year. Although the track meets a high standard in terms of its facilities, it has never hosted a Formula 1 race. Due to the circuit ending up in financial difficulties, it has changed hands several times but still operates to this day.

[edit] History

The circuit, located within Aso Kujiyu National Park, was built at a cost of $500 million by the wealthy real-estate developer and investment banker Tomonori Tsurumaki who made headlines in 1989, when during a Paris auction, he successfully bid a Pablo Picasso painting Les Noces de Pierrette for $51.3 million from his Tokyo hotel room. Following his successful bid, he announced that his painting was to hang at at the art gallery of the auto racing resort, under development at the time. [1]

The circuit was designed by Yoshitoshi Sakurai who was the project leader of the Honda F1 team during the 1960s.[2]

Tsurumaki ordered 30 Buick powered US built single seater race cars called "Sabre Cars" for a race to take place on his circuit's grand opening, on November 1990 consisting of a mixture of invited US CART drivers such as Stan Fox, Johnny Rutherford, Dick Simon, Gary and Tony Bettenhausen, against local Japanese drivers. After the grand opening, Tsurumaki planned on a series with the cars, known as FC-45 "Formula Crane". A few races were run in 1991, with only a handful of cars competing.

The only major international race held at Autopolis was the 1991 World Sportscar Championship season final race, the 1991 430km of Autopolis which was won by Michael Schumacher and Karl Wendlinger in a Mercedes-Benz C291 fielded by Sauber.

To promote the venue's intention to host a Formula 1 race, it sponsored the Benetton Formula 1 team in 1990 and 1991. The cars featured prominent Autopolis logos. Visitors criticized the track for being too remote to the hotels which required several hours bus ride and felt that it was unsuitable for an F1 race. By then, hopes were fading, Tsurumaki turned up at the 1992 Portuguese Grand Prix. Whilst staying in Estoril, $250,000 of cash and jewels was stolen from his hotel room.

Tsurumaki also invested in race horse[3] A.P. Indy[4] and paintings of renowned painters such as Picasso, Monet, Van Gogh, Chagall, Renoir and Magritte before his company, Nippon Tri-Trust collapsed, leading to his bankruptcy in 1993.[5] The circuit plus the painting and contents ended up at the hands of Hazama who was responsible for the construction of the race track.[6]

By 1995, the company offered the site for sale at 10% of its build cost which consisted of three hotels, swimming pools and an artificial ski slope. The paintings by then remained in a bank vault waiting to be sold.[7]

The circuit currently holds events for the D1 Grand Prix as well as Super GT.

Autopolis Pit Lane Autopolis From Mountainside Autopolis Entry Gate

[edit] References

  1. ^ Japanese Developer Buys Picasso at Record Price - New York Times
  2. ^ F1 News - Grandprix.com > GP Encyclopedia > Circuits > Nippon Autopolis
  3. ^ SPORTS PEOPLE: HORSE RACING; Sold! For $2.9 Million - New York Times
  4. ^ National Museum of Racing - Hall of Fame
  5. ^ Yakuza: Japan's Criminal Underworld By David E. Kaplan, Alec Dubro
  6. ^ The Art of a Failed Economy | www.japaninc.com
  7. ^ F1 News - Grandprix.com: Autopolis going to the wall

[edit] External links

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