Circuit Paul Armagnac

Motorsport track in France From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Circuit Paul Armagnacmap

Circuit Paul Armagnac, also known as Circuit de Nogaro, is a motorsport race track located in the commune of Nogaro in the Gers department in southwestern France. The track is named in honor of Nogaro-born racing driver Paul Armagnac, who died in an accident during practice for the 1962 1000 km de Paris at the Montlhéry circuit.[1]

Quick Facts Location, Time zone ...
Circuit Paul Armagnac
Thumb
LocationNogaro, Gers, France
Time zoneCET (UTC+1)
CEST (DST)
Coordinates43°46′5″N 0°2′17″W
FIA Grade2[a]
Opened3 October 1960; 64 years ago (1960-10-03)
Major eventsCurrent:
Coupes de Pâques de Nogaro [fr]
(1968–present)
FFSA GT (1997–2011, 2014, 2016–present)
Alpine Elf Cup (2019–present)
Former:
Grand Prix motorcycle racing
French motorcycle Grand Prix (1978, 1982)
European Truck Racing Championship (1994–2016)
Blancpain Sprint Series (2013–2015)
NASCAR Whelen Euro Series (2009–2013)
FIA GT (2007–2008)
FIA Sportscar Championship (2003)
BPR GT (1995–1996)
F3000 (1990–1993)
ETCC (1985–1988)
Formula 750 (1976, 1979)
Sidecar World Championship (1978)
Websitehttp://www.circuit-nogaro.com/
Grand Prix Circuit (1989–present)[b]
Length3.636 km (2.259 miles)
Turns14
Race lap record1:20.160 ( Alessandro Zanardi, Reynard 91D, 1991, F3000)
Grand Prix Circuit (1973–1988)
Length3.120 km (1.939 miles)
Turns11
Race lap record1:11.860 ( Ricardo Zunino, Arrows A1, 1979, F1)
Original Circuit (1960–1973)
Length1.752 km (1.089 miles)
Turns9
Race lap record0:51.700 ( Christian Ethuin [pl], Martini MK12, 1973, F3)
Close

History

Summarize
Perspective

Motorsports racing events in Nogaro were first organized when racing driver Paul Armagnac and Robert Castagnon created the Association Sportive Automobile de l'Armagnac. In 1953, the Rallye de l'Armagnac was held on a street circuit using public roads around Nogaro. Public safety concerns after the 1955 Le Mans disaster caused the number of road racing events on public roads in Europe to decrease. Plans were made to create a permanent race circuit and construction began in 1959 at a site near the Nogaro airport.[citation needed]

The race circuit opened on 3 October 1960 as the first purpose-built race circuit in France.[2][3][4] The first race held at the new circuit was the Nogaro Grand Prix for Formula Junior cars, won by Bruno Basini.[2] Initially 1.752 km (1.089 mi) long, it was expanded in 1973 and 1989 to its current 3.636 km (2.259 mi) length. In 2007 the circuit was modernized including a new control tower, a new pitlane and widening the track to 12 m (39 ft).[citation needed]

The venue hosted Formula Two championship races from 1975 to 1978. It also hosted the French motorcycle Grand Prix in 1978 and 1982. The Nogaro circuit also hosted the European Touring Car Championship from 1985 to 1988.[citation needed]

Track description

The track is relatively flat, with 6 m (20 ft) difference in elevation between its highest and lowest points. It is raced clockwise and consists of two long straights, the 0.950 km (0.590 mi) long start-finish straight named after Nogaro-born motorcycle constructor Claude Fior and the almost parallel aerodrome straight, linked by sections of several slow corners. The aerodrome straight passes alongside the neighbouring Nogaro Aerodrome.

Events

Current
Former

Lap records

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
Current Grand Prix circuit with the original start-finish line (1989–2007)[b]

The official lap record for the current Grand Prix circuit layout is 1:20.160, set by Alessandro Zanardi during the 1991 Nogaro F3000 round, while the unofficial all-time track record is 1:17.342, set by Franck Lagorce in the qualifying of 1993 Nogaro F3000 round.[3][6] As of April 2025, the fastest official race lap records at the Circuit Paul Armagnac are listed as:

More information Category, Time ...
CategoryTimeDriverVehicleEvent
Grand Prix Circuit (1989–present): 3.636 km[b][2]
Formula 30001:20.160[7]Alessandro ZanardiReynard 91D1991 Nogaro F3000 round
Formula Three1:22.226[8]Romain GrosjeanDallara F3052007 Nogaro F3 Euro Series round
LMP9001:23.906[9]Beppe GabbianiDome S1012003 Nogaro FIA Sportscar Championship round
LMP31:24.218[10]Nelson Panciatici[11]Ligier JS P32016 Nogaro FFSA GTP round
Formula Renault 2.01:24.437[12]Arthur PicTatuus FR20002009 Nogaro Formula Renault 2.0 West European Cup round
GT1 (GTS)1:25.326[13]Gregory FranchiSaleen S7-R2008 FIA GT Nogaro 2 Hours
Formula 41:25.846[14]Alexandre MunozMygale M21-F42025 Nogaro French F4 round
Superbike1:26.357[15]Kenny ForayBMW M1000RR2024 Nogaro French Superbike round
GT31:26.982[16]Stéphane OrtelliAudi R8 LMS ultra2015 Nogaro Blancpain GT Sprint Series round
Porsche Carrera Cup1:27.807[17]Louis PerrotPorsche 911 (992) GT3 Cup2024 Nogaro Porsche Sprint Challenge France round
GT21:28.030[13]Andrew KirkaldyFerrari F430 GT22008 FIA GT Nogaro 2 Hours
LMP6751:28.039[9]Mirko SavoldiLucchini SR20022003 Nogaro FIA Sportscar Championship round
Supersport1:28.189[18]Corentin Perolari [de]Honda CBR600RR2024 Nogaro French Supersport round
GT11:28.218[19]Jean-Marc GounonFerrari F40 GTE1996 BPR 4 Hours of Nogaro
FIA GT Group 21:29.379[13]Tomáš EngeAston Martin Vantage GT22008 FIA GT Nogaro 2 Hours
Formula Renault 1.61:30.368[20]Lasse SørensenSignatech FR 1.62014 Nogaro French F4 round
GT41:30.736[21]Loris CabirouGinetta G56 GT4 Evo2024 Nogaro French GT4 Cup round
TCR Touring Car1:31.165[22]Julien BrichéHyundai Elantra N TCR2025 Nogaro TC France round
GT2 (GTS)1:31.581[23]Jean-Pierre JarierPorsche 911 GT21999 Nogaro FFSA GT round
Silhouette racing car1:31.979[24]Soheil AyariPeugeot 406 Coupé Silhouette2002 Nogaro French Supertouring round
Alpine Elf Cup1:32.089[25]Léo JoussetAlpine A110 Cup2025 Nogaro Alpine Elf Cup round
Stock car racing1:34.838[26]Ander VilariñoChevrolet Camaro NASCAR2013 Nogaro NASCAR Whelen Euro Series round
Supersport 3001:38.005[27]Livio MirabelKawasaki Ninja 4002024 Nogaro French Supersport 300 round
Renault Clio Cup1:40.582[28]Nicolas MilanRenault Clio R.S. IV2018 Nogaro Renault Clio Cup France round
Grand Prix Circuit (1973–1988): 3.120 km[2]
Formula One1:11.860[6][29]Ricardo ZuninoArrows A11979 Nogaro British F1 round
Formula Three1:12.120[30]Éric BernardRalt RT311987 1st Nogaro French F3 round
Formula Two1:12.390[31]Bruno GiacomelliMarch 7821978 Nogaro F2 round
Formula Renault 2.01:21.220[32]Patrick GoninMartini MK331981 1st Nogaro French Formula Renault round
Group A1:21.240[33]Klaus LudwigFord Sierra RS500 Cosworth1988 Nogaro ETCC round
500cc1:22.800Kenny RobertsYamaha YZR5001978 French motorcycle Grand Prix
350cc1:24.500Gregg HansfordKawasaki KR3501978 French motorcycle Grand Prix
250cc1:25.000Jean-François BaldéKawasaki KR2501982 French motorcycle Grand Prix
Sidecar (B2A)1:29.600Rolf BilandBeo-Yamaha1978 French motorcycle Grand Prix
125cc1:30.060Jean-Claude Selini [fr]Morbidelli 125 GP1982 French motorcycle Grand Prix
Original Circuit (1960–1973): 1.752 km[2]
Formula Three0:51.700[34]Christian Ethuin [pl]Martini MK121973 1st Nogaro French F3 round
Formula Renault 2.00:59.300[35]Max JeanMartini MK331968 1st Nogaro French Formula Renault round
Formula Junior1:03.000[36]Jean VinatierLotus 271963 Nogaro French Formula Junior round
Close

Notes

  1. Circuit Paul Armagnac's Grade 2 licence expired on 13 October 2024.
  2. The start-finish line was changed in 2007, however the layout configuration has not been changed since 1989.

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.