Barber Motorsports Park: Difference between revisions

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** Stock Car Championship Series
** Stock Car Championship Series
** Fran-Am 2000
** Fran-Am 2000
* [[Honda Superbike Classic]] (2003–)
* [[AMA Superbike Championship]] (2003–)
** AMA Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship (2 races) (100 km/60 laps)
** AMA Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship (2 races) (100 km/60 laps)
** AMA Genuine Suzuki Accessories Superstock Race (60 km/17 laps)
** AMA Genuine Suzuki Accessories Superstock Race (60 km/17 laps)

Revision as of 23:04, 26 September 2010

The Barber Motorsports Park is a large racing complex in the Birmingham city limits near Leeds featuring a 2.38 mile world-class race course in a 740-acre wooded park with a museum of vintage motorcycles and race cars and other facilities. Former Barber Dairies owner and motorcycle racing enthusiast George Barber constructed the Park in 2003 with $70 million of his personal fortune. The park debuted to the public with the inaugural Barber 250 sports car race. The museum opened shortly thereafter.

In 2008 Barber discussed plans to expand the park with a new motocross track, additions to the museum building, and a possible lengthening of the road course's straight-away. Also planned are higher-profile motorcycle events and the Indy Grand Prix of Alabama, an Indy Racing League open-wheel event.

Race course

Barber race course track map

The Barber race course is 2.38 miles long by 45 feet wide with 16 turns and a total elevation change of just over 80 feet. The course is designed and engineered to the highest standards of international racing and is set in landscaped grounds arrayed so that from most vantage points a large percentage of the course is visible despite the hills and turns.

The grandstands are surmounted by a large pressbox and information board. In front of the grandstand is the race control area, paddocks, and pit lane.

Records

  • Fastest lap (car): 1 min 09.4557s (avg. speed 119.213 mph) by Will Power (March 2009)
  • Fastest lap (motorcycle): 1 min 23.664s (avg. speed 115.474 mph) by Mat Mladin (April 2008)

Barber Vintage Motorsports Museum

The museum building displays Barber's collection of more than 1000 motorcycles, the largest in the world, along with a smaller collection of Lotus and other race cars and memorabilia. The museum operates as a non-profit foundation and was open between 1995 and 2002 in a building on 5th Avenue South before moving to a new building in the Barber Motorsports Park in 2003.

The museum occupies 141,000 square feet on five floors and itself has views over part of the course. Besides the 80,000 square feet of exhibition space, it also houses offices, workshop space, a 5000-volume research library and gift shop. A planned expansion could add 100,000 square-feet to the facility with new meeting and event rooms and hospitality suites as well as enough additional display space for hundreds more motorcycles from Barber's collection to go on display.

Several of the pieces in the collection are maintained in racing shape and used on Vintage racing circuits by the Barber Vintage Motorcycle Team.

Driving schools

Since its opening, the Barber Motorsports Park has hosted the "Porsche Driving Experience," a 2-day course with instruction on handling high-performance vehicles in a race course environment.

Beginning in 2009 the Kevin Schwantz Suzuki School, led by former 500cc world champion Schwantz, will be held eight times a year at the track.

Races

The Barber Motorsports Park has hosted the following races:

Park

In addition to motor racing and museum facilities, the park has abundant parking and landscaped areas for spectators and camping during race weekends.

References

  • Diel, Stan (April 20, 2008) "Expansion plans would double size of Birmingham's Barber Motorsports Park." Birmingham News
  • Tomberlin, Michael (July 30, 2008) "Barber eyes adding motocross racing." Birmingham News
  • Tomberlin, Michael (July 26, 2009) "Indy Car race coming to Barber Motorsports Park in Birmingham." Birmingham News

External links

Locate with
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