Circuit de Charade
Template:Short description Template:Infobox motorsport venue
The Circuit de Charade, also known as Circuit Louis Rosier and Circuit Clermont-Ferrand, is a motorsport race track in Saint-Genès-Champanelle near Clermont-Ferrand in the Puy-de-Dôme department in Auvergne in central France.<ref name="Charade">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The circuit, built around the base of an extinct volcano, was known for its challenging layout which favored the most skillful drivers and motorcyclists.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/> It hosted the French Grand Prix four times and the French motorcycle Grand Prix ten times.
Circuit historyEdit
There had been local interest in motorsport racing beginning with proposals in 1908 for a race on a street circuit, although the proposals were never enacted.<ref name="Charade"/> Efforts were renewed after the Second World War when the President of the Sports Association of the Automobile Club of Auvergne, Jean Auchatraire, and accomplished racer Louis Rosier designed a course by adapting pre-existing roads around the Puy de Dôme, an extinct volcano which dominated the city skyline.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="A Brief History of Charade">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Construction began in May 1957 and the first race was held in July 1958 when an endurance race was won by Innes Ireland in a Lotus 1100, and a Formula Two race won by Maurice Trintignant in a Cooper T43.<ref name="Charade"/>
Originally, the Template:Convert long circuit was described as an even twistier and faster version of the Nürburgring.<ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/><ref name="Circuit Charade">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> With a relentless number of sharp curves and elevation changes and with almost no discernible straights, the circuit was both feared and respected by competitors.<ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/><ref name="Circuit Charade"/> The sinuous track layout caused some drivers like Jochen Rindt in the 1969 French Grand Prix to complain of motion sickness, and wore open face helmets just in case.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/> Despite the numerous curves, the track was relatively fast with Chris Amon setting the lap record in a Matra MS120 with a Template:Cvt average during the 1972 French Grand Prix.<ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In his 1969 book Motor Cycle Racing, Peter Carrick wrote:
The French Grand Prix circuit at Clermont Ferrand was seen to be in complete contrast to the lap at Monza, when it was first used in 1959: the longest straight was Template:Cvt and a variety of really tight corners quickly demonstrated—or exposed—a rider's skill!<ref>Carrick, Peter Motor Cycle Racing Hamlyn Publishing 1969/70 p.91 Template:ISBN Accessed 2013-07-30</ref>
The venue first gained international prominence when it hosted the French motorcycle Grand Prix in 1959, won by John Surtees riding an MV Agusta.<ref name="Charade"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The circuit would host the French motorcycle Grand Prix ten times between 1959 and 1974.<ref name="Charade"/> In 1959, Stirling Moss competed on the track for the first time and declared: "I don't know a more wonderful track than Charade".<ref name="A Brief History of Charade"/> Also in 1959, Ivor Bueb winner of the 1955 24 Hours of Le Mans, died following a crash at the Charade Circuit.<ref name="A Brief History of Charade"/> The death would mark the only driver fatality at the circuit.<ref name="A Brief History of Charade"/> The only motorcyclist fatality occurred when Marcelin Herranz was killed on June 1, 1963 during the 250cc race of the French motorcycle Grand Prix.<ref name="herranz">Template:Cite news</ref>
The 1964 Trophées d'Auvergne Formula 2 race podium was a sign of things to come: Denny Hulme, Jackie Stewart and Jochen Rindt showed their skill before the circuit hosted its first Formula 1 race when Jim Clark won the 1965 French Grand Prix for Team Lotus.<ref name="formula1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 1965, John Frankenheimer filmed a small part of his movie Grand Prix in front of 3,000 local inhabitants, who posed as race spectators watching actors like Yves Montand and Françoise Hardy.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/> In total four Formula One French Grand Prix were held at Charade, in 1965, 1969, 1970 and 1972.
While the circuit's natural setting created conditions for a sinuous, challenging race course, it also created safety concerns due to the dark, volcanic rocks which routinely fell from the mountain onto both sides of the track.<ref name="Charade"/> The rocks posed a perennial hazard at the Charade Circuit, as was shown during the 1972 French Grand Prix when ten drivers, including Chris Amon, suffered tire punctures.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/> Drivers who skirted the track edge would send rocks flying in the middle of the road and into the path of pursuing competitors. One particular incident at the 1972 French Grand Prix involved a rock penetrating Helmut Marko's helmet visor after being kicked up from ahead of him, cutting his racing career short as his left eye was subsequently blinded.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/> The mountainous topography also left no room to provide safe run-off areas in the event of competitors losing control of their vehicles and unintentionally leaving the race course.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/>
The venue became increasingly shunned by international racing series as concerns about the public roads' dangerous nature rose.<ref name="Charade"/> In 1971, the newly built and much safer Circuit Paul Ricard held the French Grand Prix for the first time, before becoming the event's permanent home from 1973 to 1990, alternating the French Grand Prix with the Circuit Dijon-Prenois.<ref name="Charade"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It continued to host smaller motorsports competitions such as Formula 3, sports car racing, touring car racing, rallying and hillclimbing as well as the Trophées d'Auverne.<ref name="Charade"/> In 1980, three track marshals were killed at a touring car race,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and in 1984 there was a drivers protest over track safety. Faced with increasing safety issues and with the natural topography preventing any chance of adding run-off areas, the final race on the original Template:Cvt track was held on September 18, 1988.<ref name="Charade"/>
ModernizationEdit
The General Council of Puy-de-Dôme recognized the importance of the race track to the local economy and financed the building of a new Template:Convert circuit utilising only the southern portion of the original, with a new link road completing the circuit.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The new Circuit de Charade opened in 1989 hosting national championship races in the 1994 French Supertouring Championship and the 1998 FFSA GT Championship.
Currently, the venue holds events such as track days, driving courses as well as historic motorsport events.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/> In 2000, the roads were closed to the public, with the track becoming a truly permanent facility with new pit garages and a widened pit lane.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/> The original sections of the Template:Cvt street circuit are still in use as public roadways.<ref name="Charade"/><ref name="The Volcanic Rush of Clermont Ferrand"/>
Lap recordsEdit
As of June 1999, the fastest official race lap records at the Circuit de Charade are listed as:
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- Official site Template:In lang
- Official association site to save circuit Template:In lang
- Satellite picture by Google Maps (present layout; zoom out to see the old circuit)
Template:Formula One circuits Template:MotoGP circuits Template:World Sportscar Championship circuits Template:Sidecar World Championship circuits Template:Formula 750 circuits Template:Authority control