Location | Kazan, Russia |
---|---|
Time zone | MSK+00 (UTC+04) |
Coordinates | 55°51′56″N 49°15′57″E / 55.86556°N 49.26583°E |
Broke ground | 2006 |
Opened | 2011 |
Architect | Hermann Tilke |
Major events | Current: Russian Circuit Racing Series (2011–present) Former: SMP F4 Championship (2019) Formula Masters Russia (2012–2015) |
Full Circuit (2011–present) | |
Length | 3.476 km (2.159 miles) |
Turns | 11 |
Race lap record | 1:20.308 ( Jury Grigorenko, Tatuus FA010, 2015, Formula Masters Russia) |
Kazan Ring is a race track, built on the outskirts of Kazan, along its bypass road next with autodrome "High Mountain".[clarification needed] The track has a length of 3.476 km (2.160 mi) and a height difference of up to 28 m (92 ft).[citation needed] The track runs counterclockwise. The first competition took place in 2011.[citation needed] The unofficial track record was set in test runs on a 2010 GP2 race car, the indicated time is 1:12.870.[1]
As of June 2023, the fastest official race lap records at the Kazan Ring are listed as:
Category | Time | Driver | Vehicle | Event |
---|---|---|---|---|
Full Circuit: 3.476 km (2011–present) | ||||
Formula Masters Russia | 1:20.308[2] | Jury Grigorenko | Tatuus FA010 | 2015 1st Kazan Formula Masters Russia round |
Formula 4 | 1:22.119[3] | Artem Lobanenko | Tatuus F4-T014 | 2019 Kazan SMP F4 round |
GT4 | 1:26.988[4] | Denis Remenyako | Mercedes-AMG GT4 | 2020 Kazan RCRS round |
TCR Touring Car | 1:27.084[5] | Pavel Kalmanovich | Audi RS 3 LMS TCR (2021) | 2023 Kazan RCRS round |