Long Circuit (1997–present) | |
| Location | Mantorp,Sweden |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 58°22′19″N15°16′58″E / 58.37194°N 15.28278°E /58.37194; 15.28278 |
| Broke ground | 1968 |
| Opened | 31 August 1969; 56 years ago (1969-08-31) |
| Architect | Lars Olof Larsson |
| Major events | Current: PCC Scandinavia (2004–present) Former: STCC (1996–2022, 2024) GT4 Scandinavia (2019–2021, 2023) ETRC (1986–1997) European F2 (1971–1973, 1981–1982) European F3 (1976) ETCC (1973) |
| Website | http://www.mantorppark.com/ |
| Long Circuit (1997–present) | |
| Length | 3.106 km (1.930 mi) |
| Turns | 13 |
| Race lap record | 1:14.337 ( |
| Short Circuit (1997–present) | |
| Length | 1.868 km (1.161 mi) |
| Turns | 8 |
| Race lap record | 0:47.102 ( |
| Long Circuit (1981–1996) | |
| Length | 3.125 km (1.942 mi) |
| Turns | 11 |
| Race lap record | 1:10.940 ( |
| Full Circuit (1969–1980) | |
| Length | 4.098 km (2.546 mi) |
| Turns | 9 |
| Race lap record | 1:24.000 ( |
Mantorp Park is a 3.106 km (1.930 mi)motor racingcircuit near the town ofMantorp inMjölby Municipality,Sweden. The circuit was built in 1969 with finance fromBP Sweden as a permanent road course and a drag strip. Mantorp Park is capable of four different layouts, but today only the short and long tracks are used.
TheEuropean Formula Two Championship visited from 1971 until 1973, and again in 1981 and 1982. Today it mainly hosts club events, dragracing, a driving school and rounds of the SwedishFormula Three Championship and theSwedish Touring Car Championship.[citation needed]
Mantorp Park was the first European drag racing circuit to adopt the new 301.8 m (1000 ft) drag strip format adopted by theNHRA in July 2008.[citation needed]
As of September 2025, the fastest official race lap records at the Mantorp Park are listed as:
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