Race track in Jakarta, Indonesia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Jakarta International e-Prix Circuit is a 2.370 km (1.473 mi) racing circuit in Ancol, Jakarta. It was built for the Jakarta ePrix of the single-seater, electrically powered Formula E championship. The first edition of Jakarta ePrix was held here in 2022.
Location | Ancol, North Jakarta |
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Time zone | UTC+07:00 |
Coordinates | 6°7′6″S 106°51′31.4″E |
FIA Grade | 3E |
Broke ground | January 2022 |
Opened | 4 June 2022 |
Major events | Current: Formula E Jakarta ePrix (2022–2023, 2025) |
Formula E Circuit (2022–present) | |
Length | 2.370 km (1.473 miles) |
Turns | 18 |
Race lap record | 1:09.171 ( Jake Dennis, Porsche 99X Electric, 2023, F-E) |
The proposal of the Jakarta ePrix was first announced in July 2019, with mid-2020 announced as the target date for an inaugural race.[1] The originally intended location, the National Monument and the Merdeka Square was rejected along with a proposal for the use of the Gelora Bung Karno Stadium.[citation needed] Originally, there were 5 options being proposed: Jenderal Sudirman Street, Indah Kapuk Beach, Jakarta International Expo, Jakarta International Stadium, and the Ancol region.[2] With the Ancol region being announced as the location in January 2022.[3]
This circuit has been under construction since 2022.[citation needed] In January 2022, the Governor of Jakarta, Anies Baswedan, inaugurated the Jakarta International e-Prix Circuit.[4] The track's construction was completed a week before the ePrix week.
The circuit has 18 corners. The circuit layout is inspired by the Kuda lumping horse and is driven clockwise. The circuit features a start/finish line straight of 600 m (2,000 ft).[5] Turn 1 is a wide right-hander with multiple choices of racing lines which generates ample overtaking opportunities, followed by two right-handers and two fast left-handers approaching the mall straight. The double left-right 90-degree turns after the mall straight is continued by a tricky and fast S-section, into a straight. The Turn 13 hairpin is the hardest braking zone in the track, followed by a right-left kink. Turn 16 has widening and banking on the outside line to accommodate the attack-mode activation zone. The lap ends with a fast left-hander and a sharp right-hander. Formula E driver Lucas di Grassi has described the track as, "having a good mixture of low, medium and high-speed corners and will test every aspect of car performance."[6]
As of June 2023, the fastest official race lap records at the Jakarta International e-Prix Circuit are listed as:
Category | Time | Driver | Vehicle | Event |
---|---|---|---|---|
Formula E Circuit: 2.370 km (2022–present) | ||||
Formula E | 1:09.171 | Jake Dennis | Porsche 99X Electric | 2023 Jakarta ePrix |
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