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All you need to know about the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve

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Formula 1 - فورمولا 1
2026/05/21 - 11:56 504 مشاهدة
(opens in a new tab)Sign InSubscribeF1ScheduleChevron DropdownPrevious 2026 SeasonDriver Standings Team StandingsArchive 1950-2025F1 AwardsNewsChevron DropdownWhat is F1? What is F1 TV?F1 GlossaryGet involved2026 RegulationsNewsVideosFacts, stats and trivia ahead of the 2026 Canadian GPAll you need to know about the Circuit Gilles VilleneuveBettingBest value early bets for the Canadian Grand PrixWhat is the Wall of Champions – and who has crashed there?Play5:20Insider Intel: Horses & F1? Sam Collins has the answers 21:30Carlos Sainz's first laps of the Madring | New Spanish GP track Alexander AlbonFernando AlonsoKimi AntonelliOliver BearmanGabriel BortoletoValtteri BottasFranco ColapintoPierre GaslyIsack HadjarLewis HamiltonNico HulkenbergLiam LawsonCharles LeclercArvid LindbladLando NorrisEsteban OconSergio PerezOscar PiastriGeorge RussellCarlos SainzLance StrollMax VerstappenAll Drivers Hall of FameTeamsChevron DropdownAlpineAston MartinAudiCadillacFerrariHaas F1 TeamMcLarenMercedesRacing BullsRed Bull RacingWilliamsAll TeamsFantasy & GamingChevron DropdownF1 Sim RacingFantasyF1 25F1 Manager 24F1 PredictF1 ClashF1 Members' AreaMenuFIA if(window.f1MobileDetection.iOSSafari) { var meta = document.createElement("meta"); meta.name = "apple-itunes-app"; meta.content = "app-id=835022598, app-argument=https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/article/circuit-guide-everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-circuit-gilles-villeneuve.5RUqO9YE80jmCiuODWNX9g.5RUqO9YE80jmCiuODWNX9g"; document.head.appendChild(meta); } {"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"NewsArticle","@id":"https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/article/circuit-guide-everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-circuit-gilles-villeneuve.5RUqO9YE80jmCiuODWNX9g","url":"https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/article/circuit-guide-everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-circuit-gilles-villeneuve.5RUqO9YE80jmCiuODWNX9g","mainEntityOfPage":"https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/article/circuit-guide-everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-circuit-gilles-villeneuve.5RUqO9YE80jmCiuODWNX9g","datePublished":"2026-05-21T11:52:21.108Z","dateModified":"2026-05-21T11:52:21.108Z","headline":"2026 Canadian Grand Prix circuit guide: Everything you need to know about the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve","author":"F1","description":"Formula 1 is back on track this weekend with the Canadian Grand Prix. But how much do you know about Montreal’s Circuit Gilles Villeneuve? F1.com present your all-in-one guide…","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https://media.formula1.com/image/upload/t_16by9South/f_auto/q_auto/v1779183650/fom-website/2026/Miscellaneous/GettyImages-2220019856.jpg"},"isAccessibleForFree":"true","publisher":{"@type":"SportsOrganization","@id":"https://www.formula1.com#organization","name":"Formula 1","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https://www.formula1.com/etc/designs/fom-website/social/f1-default-share.jpg","width":"480","height":"120"}}}Canada2026CIRCUIT GUIDE: Everything you need to know about the Circuit Gilles VilleneuveGet up to speed with all the key Circuit Gilles Villeneuve statistics, driving pointers, facts and more. Formula 1 is back on track this weekend with the Canadian Grand Prix. But how much do you know about Montreal’s Circuit Gilles Villeneuve? F1.com present your all-in-one guide… Canada first hosted a World Championship Grand Prix back in 1967, with the event initially alternating between tracks at Mosport Park (in Ontario) and Mont-Tremblant (in Quebec). Then, for 1978, the city of Montreal (also Quebec) took over with the Circuit Île Notre-Dame – a man-made island situated in the middle of the St Lawrence River that was created for the Expo 67 World’s Fair. Once the Expo and the 1976 Montreal Summer Olympics had left town, officials decided to make a race track out of the island’s roads, and it has been the country’s home for F1 ever since. Local hero Gilles Villeneuve fittingly scored his maiden F1 win in the debut 1978 race, before the track was renamed in his honour – to the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve – following his tragic death. Montreal’s low-downforce circuit is one of the drivers’ favourites, comprising flat-out blasts, tight, tricky chicanes and an almighty slam of the brakes for the hairpin. Out of the corners, the track is fast and flowing, while the most iconic piece of the circuit comes right at the end of the lap: the Wall of Champions, so-called after Damon Hill, Jacques Villeneuve and Michael Schumacher all hit it during the 1999 Canadian Grand Prix weekend. So, what exactly does it feel like behind the wheel of an F1 car? “Canada is a really nice track to drive, and you get a sense of atmosphere going around it,” says former Renault F1 driver Jolyon Palmer. “Overhanging trees give it the feel of a park, and it feels like a street circuit – in essence, it is. “There are a lot of slow-speed corners, the walls are very close in a lot of places, but it’s a great racetrack. You need a good front-end to get your car turned into the chicanes, which are pretty much everywhere. “Then there’s the hairpin, which launches you into an overtaking area at the final chicane. If not there, maybe you’ll have a little sniff of something into Turn 1. Turns 1 and 2 are pretty tricky because you’re approaching Turn 1 very, very fast, arcing to the right as you’re braking, and then hurling speed to the left. “If you have any sort of moment coming to Turn 1, you’re really off-line or cutting the corner down towards Turn 2, while tyre warm-up sometimes isn’t ideal here, particularly on chillier days in Montreal.” Canada is a really nice track to drive, and you get a sense of atmosphere going around it. Overhanging trees give it the feel of a park, and it feels like a street circuit.Jolyon PalmerWhere are the Straight Mode zones and overtake detection? As a reminder, and as explained in our pre-season summary of regulation changes, Straight Mode is a different aerodynamic configuration that allows cars to reduce their drag, making them more efficient when accelerating up towards top speed. The rear wing continues to open up a gap – just like it did when drivers used DRS (the Drag Reduction System) in the past – but now the front wing also moves. The uppermost front wing elements drop down at the same time the rear wing’s top element does. This is a mode that is used on every single lap in dry conditions, in every area that is designated for it. Essentially, the car will adapt between two different configurations depending on where it is on the track, providing maximum downforce in corners but then less drag on straights. In Canada, there are three designated Straight Mode zones, beginning with a run along the start/finish straight, then between Turns 7 and 8, and finally between Turns 11 and 13. Meanwhile, Overtake Mode replaces DRS and is a new power mode that allows a driver to recharge more electrical energy, and generate an additional electrical power profile, so they can sustain a higher speed for a longer period. There is one detection point per lap for this mode – expected to be out of the final corner on many occasions, leading onto a long straight – and it will be available to drivers on the following lap as long as they stay within a second of the car in front at that detection point. The Overtake Detection marker at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve comes just before the entry to Turn 13, while the Overtake Activation line follows at the exit of Turn 14, heading onto the start/finish straight. OUR PARTNERSView allDownload the Official F1 AppScheduleDriversNewsTeamsFantasy & GamingCookie PreferencesMoreF1FacebookXInstagramYouTube© 2003-2026 Formula One World Championship Limited
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