Molson Indy Vancouver

Molson Indy Vancouver
IndyCar / CART / Champ Car
LocationConcord Pacific Place, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
49°16′34″N 123°6′24″W / 49.27611°N 123.10667°W / 49.27611; -123.10667
Corporate sponsorMolson
First race1990
Last race2004
Most wins (driver)Al Unser Jr. (4)
Most wins (team)Newman/Haas Racing (3)
Team Green (3)
Most wins (manufacturer)Chassis: Lola (7)
Engine: Ford-Cosworth (4)
Honda (4)
Circuit information
SurfaceAsphalt/Concrete
Length2.865 km (1.780 mi)
Turns15
Vancouver Street Circuit
Vancouver Street Circuit (1999–2004)
LocationConcord Pacific Place, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Time zoneUTC-07:00
Coordinates49°16′34″N 123°6′24″W / 49.27611°N 123.10667°W / 49.27611; -123.10667
Opened1990
Closed2004
Major eventsFormer:
CART
Molson Indy Vancouver (1990–2004)
SpeedVision World Challenge (1999)
Proposed ePrix Circuit (2022)
Length2.21[1] km (1.37 miles)
Turns15
Street Circuit (1999–2004)
Length2.865 km (1.780 miles)
Turns14
Race lap record1:01.538 (Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya, Lola B2K/00, 2000, CART)
Street Circuit (1998)
Length2.866 km (1.781 miles)
Turns14
Race lap record1:06.939 (Brazil Hélio Castroneves, Reynard 98I, 1998, CART)
Street Circuit (1990-1997)
Length2.660 km (1.653 miles)
Turns19
Race lap record0:55.136 (Italy Alex Zanardi, Reynard 97I, 1997, CART)

Molson Indy Vancouver was an annual Champ Car race held in a street circuit near BC Place and running past Science World in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada held in July, August or September from 1990 to 2004.

On September 2, 1990, the first race took place on the original circuit, which was won by Al Unser Jr. From 1998, a new circuit was created to the east of the old Pacific Place, where only a small part of the original circuit was used. The circuit was popular with drivers and often produced an entertaining race. For most of its fifteen years, the Vancouver Indy attracted in excess of 100,000 spectators over the course of its weekends, and in 1996 held the Canadian single-day sporting event attendance record until it was beaten by the Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal that year. [2] The final event in 2004 had race day attendance of 63,000 with a total three day turnout of 158,420 spectators. [3] However, from 2004, Vancouver was left off the Champ Car fixture list.

In July 2021 it was announced a new race for the electric-powered FIA Formula E World Championship, the Vancouver ePrix would be run on the same site.[4] However on 18 June 2022, it was announced that the race contract was terminated.[5]

  1. ^ "Canadian E-Fest Formula E Overview". Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  2. ^ Charters, David A. (2007). The Chequered Past: Sports Car Racing & Rallying in Canada, 1951-1991. University of Toronto Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-0-8020-9394-3.
  3. ^ Sabine, Alex (2005). Autocourse Official Champ Car Yearbook 2004–2005. Crash Media Group Press. pp. 110–113. ISBN 978-1905334001.
  4. ^ "SEASON 8 CALENDAR: Cape Town, Vancouver and Seoul feature on most expansive Formula E schedule yet". FIA Formula E. Retrieved 2021-07-08.
  5. ^ "Formula E nixes 2023 Vancouver race, cuts ties with local organizers". Retrieved 19 June 2022.