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The Miami International Autodrome is a purpose-built temporary circuit around Hard Rock Stadium and its private facilities in the Miami suburb of Miami Gardens, Florida, United States. The track is 3.363 mi (5.412 km) long and features 19 corners with an average in a Formula One car of around 139 mph (224 km/h) in qualifying. [ 2 ]
Miami City Hall Miami City Hall. Miami City Hall is the local government headquarters for the City of Miami, Florida.It has been located in the former Pan American Airlines Terminal Building on Dinner Key, which was designed by Delano & Aldrich and constructed in 1934 [2] for the former International Pan American Airport, [3] since 1954. [4]
The "Map" column shows a diagram of the latest configuration on current tracks and the last configuration used on past tracks. The "Type" column refers to the type of circuit: "street" is a circuit held on closed city streets, "road" refers to a mixture of public roads and a permanent track, and "race" is a permanent facility.
An aerial view circa 1968 of the north side of Miami International Airport along Northwest 36th Street shows the Pan American Regional Headquarters building, at right center, with a hangar from ...
Red Bull RB18 F1 car at the 2022 Miami Grand Prix. Miami’s history of hosting racing events dates back as far as the early 1980s. Ralph Sanchez, a local Miami promoter and racing car driver proposed a race on a hybrid street/permanent circuit in Bayfront Park in the center of Miami to Formula One rights holder Bernie Ecclestone, but for various reasons was not able to make it work.
A company tied to the Miami Dolphins and team owner Stephen Ross, a South Florida billionaire with business before the city of Miami, gave Miami Mayor Francis Suarez a $3,500 Formula 1 ticket in ...
Logan Sargeant is the first American in Formula One since 2015 and grew up racing at Homestead-Miami Speedway. What it’s like for South Florida’s Logan Sargeant, F1’s only American, to race ...
The following is a timeline for Google Street View, a technology implemented in Google Maps and Google Earth that provides ground-level interactive panoramas of cities. The service was first introduced in the United States on May 25, 2007, and initially covered only five cities: San Francisco, Las Vegas, Denver, Miami, and New York City.