F1's Chicago Plans: Another Street Track That Could Eliminate An Iconic Venue

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Shortly after announcing the move from Catalunya to Madrid, rumors of another F1 street track joining the calendar are circulating. The possible Chicago circuit could spell bad news for real-life Formula One fans as well as for the EA Sports game series.

Image credit: Getty Images / Red Bull Content Pool

There are certain icons in any sport that are simply immovable objects, and racing is no different. Sometimes, there are even multiple examples. IndyCar’s crown jewel races include the Indy 500, Long Beach and Road America. NASCAR would be unthinkable without Daytona, Talladega or Charlotte. The same goes for the World Rally Championship and Rally Finland or Rally Monte Carlo.

Formula One has more than one of these icons, too. There is the undisputed trademark at Monaco, although the races themselves tend to be rather uninspiring these days. The Italian Grand Prix at Monza is almost as legendary. Silverstone has a comparable status for the British Grand Prix. And who could forget the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps on their list of the F1 Icons Trifecta?

F1 Street Tracks: Chicago Could Be Next​

Well, it would seem that the latter might not be around too much longer. Rumors of this are nothing new, but Spa has reportedly inked a deal to host F1 until 2025. The classic Ardennes circuit is a favorite of both drivers and fans, being extremely challenging and spectacular at the same time.

However, shortly after the news of a Madrid street circuit replacing Barcelona-Catalunya as the Spanish Grand Prix venue was met with little enthusiasm from fans, the next track of this kind seems to be waiting in the wings. Reportedly, F1 is flirting with the idea of hosting yet another street race, this time in Chicago. This would make it the fourth Grand Prix in the United States, should the current US races at COTA, Miami and Las Vegas stay on the calendar.

As the schedule is already near the limit of what is possible at 24 races, another event being on the chopping block would seem likely. As Spa only received one-year contract extensions in recent years, it could be a candidate to meet said chopping block.


F1 Street Tracks In The US: Not The First Foray​

This, in turn, would mean that once this change takes place, the official F1 game would lose a classic circuit. In its place would be yet another modern street track. Looking towards 2026, there would be six of these that joined the calendar since Liberty Media took over the reigns.

Of course, F1 is a business first and foremost, and pretending it is too focused on money only since Liberty Media came in would simply be ignorant. It has always been a sport for those with big bank accounts, and it is not even the first time there were multiple street circuits in the US. In fact, the 1984 season even had two consecutive Stateside street races, with the Dallas Grand Prix following the Detroit Grand Prix in the middle of the year.

Multiple Alternatives​

What makes this current street circuit craze so frustrating from a racing fan’s perspective, however, is that there are so many circuits out there that would be worthy of hosting a GP. Sure, it may be idealistic, but venues such as Mugello, Portimão, Hockenheim or the Nürburgring would be much more popular in many fans’ book.

In fact, when Red Bull brought multiple older F1 cars to the Red Bull Formula event happening alongside the NLS 12 Hours in September 2023, the ‘Ring was absolutely packed with fans – even more so than for the actual endurance race that weekend.

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Formula One cars still draw people to the Nürburgring, as Red Bull Formula Nürburgring 2023 impressively showed. Image credit: Philip Platzer / Red Bull Content Pool

Then you have the Kyalami Grand Prix circuit, which is still hoping to make its return after last hosting F1 in 1993. It would also be the only race held in Africa, the only continent not currently on the calendar. From 1967 to 1985, Kyalami was among the most popular races each season.

Plus, there is a certain irony in this quest for making Formula One an enormous deal in the United States. Four races, three on them on uninspired street circuits? Sure, no problem. But arguably the biggest name in US racing in Andretti, backed by one of the biggest car manufacturers in the world in General Motors? No, thank you, “we do not believe that the applicant would be a competitive participant.”

F1 Street Tracks: Show Over Racing?​

Should the trend indeed continue, it would be reflected in the EA Sports F1 series, too. Players would get to race at less iconic venues and more very similar street circuits. Newcomers in particular might miss out on great circuits in favor of tracks that are surely challenging and spectacular in some cases, but also sometimes appear to treat the racing aspect of the actual event as a bit of a side note. And that is not what the pinnacle of motorsport should be about, in the author’s humble opinion.

It is also not the case that street circuits are bad per se. Tracks like Adelaide (particularly in its longer layout used in 2000), Long Beach or, to add a more modern example, Baku show that the opposite is true. And even the new breed of street circuits may be fun to drive in games and sims - but them potentially coming in at the expense of a classic venue is a bitter pill to swallow.

Luckily, sim racers can create their own calendars in other titles quite easily. If you think 24 races are too many, you can run a championship on a smaller calendar just as well. Want to substitute a track or two? There is nothing stopping you from doing just that in Assetto Corsa or rFactor 2.

Not Everything Was Better "Back In My Day", Either​

Most F1 fans are not hardcore sim racers, though, so their main point of contact would be the official F1 game. The thought of a new generation growing up on these games and possibly not learning about the icons that made the sport what it is today is weird, to say the least.

I realize that this article may feel like “back in my day, everything was better”. That certainly is not the intention, even though F1 was much more appealing to me personally. Even in the much-revered V10 era, there were some headscratchers, like 2005’s rule that a tire set had to last for the full race or the road course configuration of Indianapolis from 2000 to 2007.

Everyone’s opinion is different, of course. Maybe you agree, maybe you think that the schedule and its development is fine as it is. Feel free to share your ideal F1 schedules in the comments or tell us your opinion on Twitter @OverTake_gg!
About author
Yannik Haustein
Lifelong motorsport enthusiast and sim racing aficionado, walking racing history encyclopedia.

Sim racing editor, streamer and one half of the SimRacing Buddies podcast (warning, German!).

Heel & Toe Gang 4 life :D

Comments

Friendship ended with F1, now WEC is my best friend.

I think Europe needs an open wheel series unique to the continent, F1 has become too global and lost its focus. Japan has Superformula, the US has Indycar, Australia has Supercars (ok, technically a tin top), and Europe should have... Formula Euro?
 
"...races at COTA, Miami and Las Vegas..."

Bah. Road America, Laguna Seca, and Watkins Glen.

Or even, since US racing is "all about ovals", F1 at Daytona. (And there's certainly plenty of room there for these oversized barges F1 is fielding now.)

But F1 and NASCARE have one thing in common - both are now more about show than racing. So Las Vegas is the perfect venue.
 
What are you smoking? The Nascar race was pretty great, despite the terrible weather, and historic due to Shane Van Gisbergen's win. I'm looking forward to their return this year, hopefully with better weather.

What are you smoking? The Nascar race was pretty great, despite the terrible weather, and historic due to Shane Van Gisbergen's win. I'm looking forward to their return this year, hopefully with better weather.
What am I smoking ? Hmm....... Truth serum. Chicago NASCAR, let me count the ways it was trash
1. It rained
2. They crashed constantly in the corners
3. A track worker was killed
4. The race was cut short
5. High speed was about 10mph

You will get that POS for a while. Chicago signed a 4 year commitment and there is no way they can get out of it without paying a ton of money. And to add insult to injury, the city spent 3.5 million dollars to host the race and got back 620k.

So calm down Bubba, I know you are still pissed that Darlington is a dead beast.
 
-Lets make a bullet fast vehicle
- good idea and lets race on greatest tracks in world that can use all power of this vehicle..
-What? Nooo, eff that, lets race on a bloody street...
- should we make it 6 gear?
-Hmmmmm....

FIA 2026 new regulations "F1 cars shall be fully automatic without clutch and without shifters"

...ffs
Well, 2026 rules do say there will only be 6 gears, so perhaps this conversation did take place. :laugh:
 
Premium
If f1 wants to race in america, there is already three of the bet tracks in the world.
Road america, watkins glen and sebring.

I gave up totally at looking formula one on tv, because of the pay per view system in Europe.
I used to big a huge fan, i switched to GT3 as main love, together with my big love , Le Mans !!
 
Staff
Premium
If f1 wants to race in america, there is already three of the bet tracks in the world.
Road america, watkins glen and sebring.

I'd rather not see them go there. Road America and Watkins Glen would likely have so many changes made to them that their character would severely be altered. And while I agree that Sebring is one of the best tracks out there, it's too rough for even IndyCars to race there, and smoothening those bumps would really take away from the track, too. In my opinion, that is :confused:
 
If f1 wants to race in america, there is already three of the bet tracks in the world.
Road america, watkins glen and sebring.

I gave up totally at looking formula one on tv, because of the pay per view system in Europe.
I used to big a huge fan, i switched to GT3 as main love, together with my big love , Le Mans !!
F1 on Sebring... that would need quite a lot of work.
And every car should use two wooden bottom plates for the weekend
The first part of the track is very narrow. the last part is racing on concrete slabs.

In general, they claim the sport is getting greener.
The cars use a few liters of fuel less, they slap a bigger battery on.

But in reality they are only using more recourses, but at other places.

Green is that when you build something it will last, not build bad 1 weekend tracks all around the world.
Spending tons on recourses that will need to get removed again.

They rather throw hundreds of millions in a temporary track that only lives once a year.
Instead of investing in a legendary venue, that could host many events for a long time to come.

You worked your way up for many years at proper tracks to become a F1 driver.
To end up in uninspiring Tilke dromes in the middle east with half empty grandstands.
Or street circuit racing in a DRS train between walls all the time.
 
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... I gave up totally at looking formula one on tv, because of the pay per view system in Europe.
... i switched to GT3 as main love, ...
same here, I also stopped watching the Netflix series midway through season 2 I think as it was just hillarious trying to squeeze some excitement out of one remark someone made or one place lost in Q2. Wondering how long SRO can keep their free view system up and running. However, only watching the highlights like at LeMans, F1 or WRC really saves a lot of time ;)
 
Premium
My point was not to say that Formula one needs to race in the USA, but only that Formula one my not need need street circuits like Chicago when there is some already legendary track available there .
Where to race (europe, america, Asia, ...) is another discussion . They can do what they want, i will probably don't look anymore, except if they make HUGE changes in the all formula one circus .
 
Premium
F1 should invest in a new pen for rule making, claiming the F1 is the pinnacle of motorsport when the only tracks they can race on are billiard board smooth and with much the same corners is a bit silly, they should race at Sebring and Daytona and Monza et all, without the tracks being altered to accommodate them, if the cars break, then that's life, if they need to raise the ride height then so be it,
No inner city track is a green track as is just used once a year and that is in itself wasteful.

So cut the cr*p and race on circuits already in permanent existence, and race till it busts with the winner being the first to cross the line or being the last man standi... running to fall.
Only then can you claim the be the best of the best.
 
Premium
Glad I gave up on F1 a couple of years ago. The direction of travel has been to move away from iconic circuits towards bland street circuits that resemble Disneyland. Kind of feels like F1 is now all about the aesthetics and off-circuit show and not the actual racing.
It’s simply about maximizing money. Historically tracks do not make as much money. Everything is driven by the need to pay the ever growing budges and inflated salaries.
 
Tired of these junk racetracks. 3, 4 or 5 races in the USA yet not a single track is good. COTA is bottom tier as well. Why no racing at Road America? Laguna Seca? There are so many options for tracks. Sure they need to be FIA grade 1 or what not.

As for the recent trend in sports of "let's go to the fans" instead of "let the fans come to us", we can see that it doesn't work. IndyCar in Nashville for example, too expensive for regular people and I live 45min away. NASCAR in Chicago was almost a disaster, NASCAR at the LA Colloseum with an amazing 75 fans in the stands, etc. Nobody wants that stuff.
 
Potentially swap Spa for a street circuit, I just threw up in my mouth a bit. :sick:
Anytime you allow American businessmen to control anything, money and the 'greed-factor' somehow always creeps in immediately...threatening to destroy it.
That isn't to say greed was never a part of F1...Bernie was plenty greedy.
What he didn't do though, despite shaking many race promoters down for massive hosting fees...was discount where his bread was buttered.
F1 is becoming a mere shell of what it was previously...despite advances in technology.
It is a bit disheartening to see some of these directional choices.
A Chicago street spectacle over Spa Fancorchamps race circuit... Really?
 
Premium
What he didn't do though, despite shaking many race promoters down for massive hosting fees...was discount where his bread was buttered.
He absolutely did do that, though. Allow me to refresh your memory:

tilkedrome

Or mabye he did know where his bread was buttered, what with Sochi and all...

Because... I mean, okay, I think those US street circuits are misguided. Regardless of the quality of the tracks themselves, focusing entirely on US streets whilst discounting that this is still supposed to be a world championship is a shame.

but I still think these circuits have some merit in the sense that they're in places where people actually go and watch them. Yes, I'd rather see them at the Indy GP course or the daytona road course, which also would draw a massive audience (since they're in the middle of a city anyway).

And to me, this is a damn sight better then racing at places like Bahrein, Abu Dhabi, or Socchi Autodrome. Places where F1 very obviously only races becuase there is a very small yet very wealthy group that's interested in hosting these events to increase their international prestige. Under Bernie there were a lot of races that only existed not to bring F1 to a wider audience, but to bring the f1 audience to autocracies hoping to rake in tourism money. In the end, that's who has been buttering bernie's bread. And I'm glad we're at the very least not doing that bullshit. For now.

But on the other hand, whilst I do think that the US street circuits are a step in the right direction wrt selling as many tickets as possible (as opposed to just cashing in a big check from the organizers for a race that nobody goes to watch), I don't think many us street circuits are actually a good idea for that. I would love to see more racing in South America (Argentina definitely should be a race what with Fangio's legendary status), where the audience definitely exists. I'd love to see a return to Malaysia. I'd love to see a return to South Africa now that it hasn't got Apartheid anymore.
 
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these circuits have some merit in the sense that they're in places where people actually go and watch them

Street circuits? They are the worst tracks for spectators - you park yourself at one spot and watch what little of the route you can see from there, because trying to move anywhere else is an exercise in futility. Better to stay home and watch on TV.
 

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