Formula 1 chiefs announced on Friday that the British Grand Prix will move from Silverstone to Donington Park from 2010 onwards in a 10-year deal.

The announcement from Formula 1’s governing body, the FIA, signals the end of Silverstone’s grip on one of the most prestigious Grands Prix on the calendar.
The Silverstone circuit has hosted the race every year since 1986 but after months of negotiation, Formula 1 chief Bernie Eccleston cited a lack of investment in facilities as the reason for the change in venue.
He said: “Finally the uncertainty is over. A contract has been signed with Donington Park and the future of the British Grand Prix is now secure.
“We wanted a world class venue for Formula 1 in Britain, something that the teams and British F1 fans could be proud of. The major development plans for Donington will give us exactly that. A venue that will put British motor sport back on the map.
“I am sorry that we could not have helped Silverstone to raise the money to carry out the circuit improvements and run Formula 1.
“I believe that the government should have supported them which would have cost probably less than 0.002 percent of the government’s commitment for the Olympic Games.”
The news will come as a bitter blow for Silverstone’s owners, the British Racing Driver’s Club, who had fought desperately to keep the race.
Ecclestone admitted that he was negotiating with Donington Park last month and acknowledged that for the circuit to host a Formula One race, investment running into tens of millions of pounds would be needed.
In fact, Donington Park will undergo a development programme running to 100 million pounds over the next five years. The track will probably need lengthening and the venue may require a new pitlane, paddock, media complex and grandstands.
Donington Park’s owners and joint CEOs, Simon Gillett and Lee Gill, commented: “We are naturally delighted and extremely proud to have acquired the rights to bring Formula One back to Donington Park from 2010.
“At the beginning of last year when we acquired the circuit and its substantial lands, we made clear our commitment towards realising the full potential of the Park by making the necessary investments in current and future events that will see Donington revitalised, ensuring its leading position as one of the most iconic racing circuits in the world.
“To that end, we have now entered a new and exciting chapter in the development of the Park and one that will bring significant investment and regional development while securing the future of one of the most important and significant sporting events in Britain.”
Donington Park does have some Formula One history: it hosted the 1993 European Grand Prix won by the legendary Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna. (See video, or this longer non-english version)
It will become the fifth home of the British Grand Prix which has also been held at Brooklands, Aintree and Brands Hatch.
FIA president Max Mosley welcomed the news and gave his endorsement to the investment planned by Donington’s owners.
He said: “After many years of patient but fruitless negotiation with the BRDC, we are delighted that Bernie has nevertheless been able to ensure that the British Grand Prix will keep its place on the Formula One World Championship calendar.
“We understand that the development programme planned for Donington will achieve the very high standards we and FOM expect from a modern F1 circuit. Finally, British Formula One fans will get the Grand Prix venue they deserve.”
Technorati Tags: Donington Park, Silverstone, Max Mosley, Bercie Ecclestone, British Grand Prix
Tags: Bercie Ecclestone, British Grand Prix, Donington Park, Max Mosley, Silverstone










peterg wrote,
First of all, Silverstone did not have a God given right to host the GP, the race has also been at Brooklands, Aintree and Brands Hatch.
However, despite the fact that Bernie has had it in for the BRDC for years, they still may have the last laugh.
Silverstone has stated that the “upgrade” required would run into the hundreds of millions, the sum that Donnington is now prepared to spend.The BRDC have maintained that this kind of investment would never be recoverable AND they were not prepared to mortgage this facility to do it.
Well let’s see Donnington chuck a hundred million at the task, & let’s see if it is sustainable.That is 20 million a year for five years! Wow, & there is Bernie’s fee on top of that…..Good Luck Donington.
If the whole thing goes south, will Bernie step in (as he did in Turkey when they went belly up) & bail it out? Nope don’t think so.
I’m a bit leery of the whole thing when disgraced FIA President, Max Mosley, wades into the fray & says:-
“After many years of patient but fruitless negotiation with the BRDC, we are delighted that Bernie has nevertheless been able to ensure that the British Grand Prix will keep its place on the Formula One World Championship calendar.”
Why is Max even commenting? FOM/Bernie controls the commercial side of F1, the FIA has nothing to do with the negotiations between the promoter & the track.
Link | July 5th, 2008 at 8:51 am
Rage-in-Chief wrote,
I have two questions, 1) how much was the bribde Donington paid to Bernie after most reports say he spent $20 mil of his own cash to ungrade Silverstone, and 2) other reports I’ve read say there’s a single major road leading to Donington and already is a mess because of a large airport on the same road, what happens when 100,000 additional people head down that highway.
Link | July 5th, 2008 at 11:34 am
peterg wrote,
Yeah, a Brit pal of mine laughed his head off when I told him, he lived near Donnington & said that when the bikes are there it is traffic chaos, he claims an F1 crowd (either in cars or public transport) will have more problems at Donnington then in Northhamptonshire.
On the other hand, the BRDC have had 10 years of warnings from Bernie & what have they “really” done to upgrade Silverstone. Refurbished their own club house (not for public use) & the car park….at a venue where you are encouraged to use public transport.
BTW, is anything more ridiculous than Jackie Stewart stating that the government should have thrown in some cash, like the Olympic infrastructure.I find it impossible to take seriously a man, who as a active & retired driver, chose to live as a tax-exile on the continent, never contributing a single penny to education, health, defense etc.Yet here he is telling the Brit tax payer to subsidise multi-million dollar F1’s & Bernie’s need for a track to drive on….f##king hilarious.
Link | July 6th, 2008 at 5:34 am