We can't wait to get going again this weekend, and there aren't many places better to get a party restarted than Zandvoort.
Found on the coast, this 4.259km venue couldn’t be any more different to the one we raced at last time out in Spa. Swooping through the sand dunes, drivers will hardly get a second to rest around this undulating, old-school race track.
With that, we’ve put together 10 statistics about the circuit and also the Netherlands to whet the appetite.
72
Come Sunday, we’ll be set for 72 laps of this undulating venue. That’s the second-highest number of racing laps of any circuit on the calendar, with only Monaco’s total of 78 keeping it from the top spot. Tucking in neatly behind on 71 you’ll find the Red Bull ring, Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez and Interlagos.
52.3711
That represents the latitude that Circuit Zandvoort is found on, making it the most northerly circuit we visit on the entire calendar. Silverstone had held that title for a considerable time during the Dutch GP's exile.
14
With just 14 corners, Zandvoort sure does pack a punch within each of those twists and turns. Only three circuits on the current calendar feature fewer turns than Zandvoort: Circuit Gilles Villeneuve with 13, Monza with 11 and Red Bull Ring with 10. Whilst Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya and the Hungaroring also boast 14.
Fan Appreciation
Together, we are on a journey. We want to honour the fans that are following us every step of the way.
18
Arie Luyendyk, the astonishing final corner named in tribute to the two-time Indianapolis 500 winner, features a banking of 18 degrees. That’s roughly twice the angle of all four corners found at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
4.259
Zandvoort first held a round of the World Championship in 1952 and was an almost continuous annual stop for the F1 fraternity up until holding its final race in 1985. When it returned in 2021 it was on a circuit with a totally revised second half of the lap, yet the current layout of 4.259km is almost precisely the same length as the old circuit’s 4.252km.
1979
We were winners at Zandvoort back in 1979, when Alan Jones claimed what was just the team’s fourth F1 victory at the time, at the wheel of the FW07 chassis. The exact car driven by Alan is set to be at the circuit this weekend.
2.9
As F1-obsessed as the Dutch have become in recent years, the Netherlands famously have more bicycles (over 22 million) than humans (17 million). The Dutch are said to cycle an average of 2.9 kilometres per day, which adds up to around 1,000 kilometres per year!
Make it yours
Pick a helmet and number to display your Williams Racing fandom to the world!
90
There will be no need to translate these facts into Dutch, as over 90% of the population of the Netherlands speak English as a second language. Overall, 94% of Dutch people speak at least two languages, far beyond the EU average of 54%.
176
The Dutch are the tallest people in the world, averaging 176cm overall, while men average 182.6 cm. Don’t get stuck behind them when you’re trying to watch the race!
179
Being situated on the North Sea coast, Zandvoort is almost as close to some UK households as Silverstone. Those living in Harwich are only 179 miles from the main entrance of the racetrack, the North Sea ferry included!