6-773: The Hamilton Street Circuit was a temporary street circuit in Hamilton , New Zealand . From 2008 to 2012 it hosted the Hamilton 400 as part of the V8 Supercars championship. From 2010 to 2012, ITM , New Zealand's largest group of independent trade building supplies, sponsored the race and it became known as the ITM 400. Some residents of the city wanted the V8s gone, as they took over city streets and blocked residents from entering and exiting their own homes. On 14 December 2010, The New Zealand Herald reported that Julie Hardaker ,
12-474: Is a motorsport racing circuit composed of temporarily closed-off public roads of a city , town or village , used in motor races . Airport runways and taxiways are also sometimes part of street circuits. Facilities such as the paddock, pit boxes, fences and grandstands are usually installed temporarily and removed soon after the race is over but in modern times the pits, garages, race control and main grandstands are sometimes permanently constructed in
18-597: The Waikato Stadium . It was generally a narrow race track with armco and concrete lined sides but it could be fast and flowing. There were plenty of passing opportunities and those who quickly dial into the contained style of street racing had the most success. The circuit was not very forgiving if the driver got off the racing line because it was surrounded by the aforementioned fences and concrete barriers. The official race lap records at Hamilton Street Circuit are listed as: Street circuit A street circuit
24-578: The V8 Supercar event was eventually deemed too great and the final V8 Supercar race was held on 22 April 2012; it was won by Mark Winterbottom . Hamilton Street Circuit was 3.310 km (2.057 mi) long circuit ran in a clockwise direction around the Frankton business district with the pit lane and main straight located on Mill Street. The circuit also went alongside the Seddon Park and
30-483: The area. Since the track surface is originally planned for normal speeds, race drivers often find street circuits bumpy and lacking grip. Run-off areas may be non-existent, which makes driving mistakes more expensive than in purpose-built circuits with wider run-off areas. Racing on a street circuit is also called "legal street racing". Local governments sometimes support races held in street circuits to promote tourism . In some cases, short segments or connector roads of
36-501: The newly elected Mayor of Hamilton, and some councilors appointed an independent auditor to audit the cost of the race. The figures released on 14 December suggested that a NZ$ 3.5m cost to change the event to a different promoter (the original promoter, Caleta Streetrace Management, was collapsed in 2010), NZ$ 5.1m for operational costs and NZ$ 20.3m for set-up costs. The sum (NZ$ 27.4 million) did not include "commercially confidential" amounts such as event sponsorship payments. The cost to run
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