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Dutch Grand Prix, Zandvoort

Amenities

Holiday Highlights

 

What's Included

 

 

Return Flights

Central Hotels

3 Day Tickets - Hairpin 2 or East Side 1 (Selected at Point of Sale)

 

Hairpin Grandstands 1 or 2
Seat type: Chairs with seat backs
Big screen: Yes
Covered: No
Numbered seating: Yes
 
The two hairpin grandstands lie back to back on either side of the sector two hairpin. As the cars approach, they will have just navigated the fast-flowing corners. They will slow right down, pass through the hairpin, and emerge on a short straight and DRS zone towards the arena.
 
As the cars do pass at relatively slow speeds, this is an excellent spot for any photographers who might want to get a close up of the cars. The Arena grandstands are also good for this, but do tend to be affected by smoke flares at the start and end of the race. There are big screens opposite each of these grandstands for convenience.
 
East Side 1 Grandstand
Seat type: Chairs with seat backs
Big screen: Yes
Covered: No
Numbered seating: Yes
 
A dream come true for Dutch racing fans, the Eastside 1 Grandstand ticket gives you the prime view of wheel to wheel action, as you witness the cars zooming into the straight just after the hairpin turn. From here, you are ideally-placed to see drivers take on a sharp 90-degree corner and yet try to overtake their competitors. 
 
 

Dutch Grand Prix, Zandvoort

When was the track built?

Like Silverstone, Zandvoort was first opened in 1948, part of the wave of post-war motorsport enthusiasm that swept across Europe. Originally made up of a mixture of permanent track and public roads that snaked through the sand dunes of the Zandvoort resort town, the Dutch Automobile Racing Club – who initiated the plans for the circuit – brought in 1927 Le Mans winner Sammy Davis to consult on the layout for the original 4.2km track.

When was its first Grand Prix?

Formula 1 arrived in the Dutch dunes in 1952, with Alberto Ascari dominating the race as he led home a 1-2-3 for Ferrari. Formula 1 would go on to race on and off at the track until 1985 – before, in 2019, the announcement came that the championship would return to Zandvoort for 2020, after a 35-year hiatus. The Covid-19 pandemic meant that became 36 years and a 2021 date.

What’s the circuit like?

‘Really quick’, ‘pretty insane’, ‘crazy’ and ‘old-school’ were words used by the current crop of F1 drivers when asked to describe the Zandvoort track that many of them tackled in their junior category days. We’d also add ‘undulating’ to that list. The Zandvoort track swoops and flows through the sand dunes, creating a rollercoaster-like feel to the lap. And while the circuit will be modernised in time for F1’s 2020 return – including increasing the banking angle at the famous Tarzan corner to an Indianapolis Motor Speedway-trumping 18 degrees – Zandvoort will remain a proper, challenging drivers’ track.

Why go?

Zandvoort combines a lot of enticing features for an F1 fan. There’s the historic track, which famously featured in John Frankenheimer’s Grand Prix, and was the scene of many great F1 moments over the years (Gilles Villeneuve’s three-wheeled lap, anyone?). There’s the atmosphere, which with Max Verstappen on the grid is set to be electric, and most definitely orange-hued. And then there’s the beachside location, just a 30-minute train ride outside of Amsterdam. What’s not to love?

Where is the best place to watch?

We recommend taking to either the first turn at Tarzan, or to one of the banked corners, either at Arie Luyendijkbocht – the final turn on the track – or Hugenholtzbocht. For F1’s 2021 return, the latter corner has been both widened and banked into a parabolic corner, to allow cars to run side by side, and at the same speed, through it. Should be exciting…

 


Details

Length:
from €2,598 pp
Dates:22 Aug 2024
To book or for more information please call: