Daytona 500 Experience
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The Daytona 500 Experience, formerly known as Daytona USA, is an interactive motorsports attraction ("The Official Attraction of NASCAR") located at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. The attraction is open 363 days a year, being closed only for Christmas and Thanksgiving.
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[edit] History
Through 1995, Daytona International Speedway featured a modest two-story visitors’ center outside of the oval's fourth turn. The first floor of the visitors' center housed the ticket office and a small sampling of racing memorabilia; the second floor was home to a wall of photographs of previous Daytona 500 winners. The Speedway also offered track tours on open-air trams.
In mid- to late-1995, the visitors center was closed and a new destination-style, interactive museum was designed to take its place. The attraction opened in July 1996 during the 1996 Pepsi 400 using the name Daytona USA. (It should not be confused with the arcade game of the same name, although the game is featured in the attraction's arcade.) The attraction was awarded the Themed Entertainment Association's THEA Award of Outstanding Achievement in September 1997.
The attraction was expanded by 10,000 sq. ft. (929m2) in July 2001. The renovation added two motion simulators: an IWERKS motion simulator ride called Daytona Dream Laps and the full-motion simulator Acceleration Alley. A third simulator, Toyota Tundra's Thunder Road, was added in 2003. Daytona USA celebrated its tenth anniversary in 2006 by adding the Daytona 500 Champion's Walk of Fame to the walkway in front of the building.[1] On July 1, 2007, Daytona USA was renamed the Daytona 500 Experience.
[edit] Exhibits
The 60,000 sq. ft. (5575m2) attraction boasts several exhibit areas, simulators and interactive displays.
- The Coca-Cola IMAX Theater, home to NASCAR 3D: The IMAX Experience, a full-length 3D feature film released in 2004. During special events the theater is also used to show other movies: during Speedweeks 2007, the theater showed Dale, a movie about the life of NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt,[2] and the theater showed 24x24: Wide Open With Jeff Gordon in July 2007.
- Acceleration Alley, a full-motion racing simulator where guests sit in 80%-scale models of NASCAR stockcars and race against other guests and AI computer competitors.
- Chevy 16-Second Pit Stop Challenge, where guests are able to test their skills as a pit crew member and compete with the Daytona 500 Experience's own Pit Crew, who practice daily.
- Goodyear Heritage Museum, which focuses on the people who have raced at Daytona Beach from the land speed record holders to stockcars racing at the Daytona Beach Road Course to stockcars racing at Daytona International Speedway.
- The attraction also offers two different Speedway Tours: the 30-minute general admission tour and a 2.5-hour VIP Tour that is available to the public by reservation.
- Toyota Tundra's Thunder Road was a two-seat simulator that delivers a fantasy ride with a 360-degree flip; it was removed in 2008.
The Champion's Walk of Fame, a Hollywood-esque concrete walk paying homage to winners of the Daytona 500 since the attraction opened in 1996, is just outside of the building, as are statues of NASCAR great Dale Earnhardt and NASCAR founder Bill France, Jr. and his wife Anne. Also on display inside the attraction are the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship trophy (known as the Winston Cup from 1971 through 2003 and the NEXTEL Cup from 2004 until 2007) and the Harley J. Earl Trophy, which is awarded to the winner of the Daytona 500.
The Daytona 500 Experience also hosts fan forums during race time and is home to the Richard Petty Driving Experience from April through October. During Bike Week and Biketoberfest, the Daytona 500 Experience transforms into D5X, an air conditioned haven for bikers featuring live bands, food and motorcycle exhibits.
[edit] Daytona 500 connection
The winning car from the Daytona 500 is displayed for the next 12 months at the Daytona 500 Experience. All winners are contractually required to surrender their winning car and all its parts, in uncleaned, complete, and unaltered condition, as explicitly specified on the race entry form. This practice is often criticized by participants because it prevents the team from driving the car (clearly a successful chassis) in the other races during the season, potentially putting them at a competitive disadvantage during the rest of the NASCAR season, most notably at the other restrictor plate races. Only twice since this display arrangement was adopted in 1997 has the winner of the Daytona 500 been able to take a different car, as required, and gone on to win the next restrictor plate race (the Aaron's 499). By the time the car is returned, approximately 364 days after the victory, it is usually considered obsolete and a write-off.
The morning after the race the winning car is inducted into the museum during the Champion's Breakfast ceremony. In some years, the driver's helmet, driving suit, or other race-used paraphernalia are also included for display.