Formula One
Latest:
Button optimistic about Honda in 2009
Ecclestone plans new F1 scoring system
Ecclestone rules out French grand prix before 2011
F1 driver Webber breaks leg after collision with car
F1 boss Ecclestone facing costly divorce
Hamilton to take on Hoy in Race of Champions
Montreal mayor slams Ecclestone over Canada GP row
Schumacher may return on two wheels
China 'may withdraw from F1'
Silverstone ticket sales hit new heights
Formula One Archive
All news archive
Donington Park to host 2010 British GP
04/07/2008
The Formula One British Grand Prix will be hosted by the Donington Park circuit from 2010 onwards, it has been announced.
The east Midlands track will take over from Silverstone in two years' time following an agreement on a new ten-year licence to keep a Grand Prix race in the UK.
It had been feared that Britain would lose its place on the F1 calendar because of the increasingly outdated facilities at Silverstone.
F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone had cast doubt over the venue's ability to host the pinnacle of motorsport, especially with a number of other nations vying for a spot on the schedule.
However, an agreement has been reached between Donington Ventures Leisure, the owners of the circuit, and Formula One Management that will see an F1 race take place at Donington for the first time since it hosted the European Grand Prix in 1993.
Circuit owners and joint chief executives Simon Gillett and Lee Gill said: "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."
The owners said they would embark upon a five-year investment programme to further modernise the venue at a cost of £100 million, which would be led by an as-yet unnamed investor.
Further details of the agreement are expected by early next week.
Delicious
Digg
Reddit
Facebook
StumbleUpon
Comments on this story
Add your comments here
No comments submitted yet