Following in the footsteps of the NFL and the Las Vegas Super Bowl Host Committee, Formula One is looking to utilize local businesses to help put on this year’s Las Vegas Grand Prix.
Motor Sports
With track lighting installation completed on Harmon Avenue, crews continue the operation on Koval Lane and the Formula One pit building.
In order to allow advertising and banners on Las Vegas Boulevard, the LVCVA needed to certify the race’s $250 million economic impact on Las Vegas.
The Las Vegas Skate Circuit is a 2,600-square-foot rink that will be located on the Paddock Club Rooftop.
The owners of Stage Door casino and Battista’s Hole in the Wall lost “millions” of dollars because of 2023’s Formula One race in Las Vegas, according to a lawsuit filed by the off-Strip properties.
Formula One is adding more racing action to Las Vegas Grand Prix weekend with the addition of the Ferrari Challenge.
Formula One will host a free fan event in the Strip during Las Vegas Grand Prix weekend this fall.
Clark County and the Las Vegas Grand Prix are again partnering to launch a text line to keep motorists on top of the latest road work tied to preparing, then dismantling the circuit for this year’s race.
A Las Vegas Strip hotel-casino is “elevating the 2024 Las Vegas Grand Prix experience” with a three-day party for Formula One racing fans.
Ticket sales and room bookings ahead of the 2024 Formula One Grand Prix are off to a slower start compared to last year’s interest, but a key race official isn’t worried.
The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority is looking to purchase $1.7 million in 2024 Formula One Las Vegas Grand Prix tickets, to be given out to customers of the valley’s tourism arm.
MGM Resorts CEO Bill Hornbuckle says 2024 Las Vegas Grand Prix ticket sales are lagging and that some MGM properties were charging up to 50 percent less for hotel rooms compared with the 2023 race.
The 18-month deal is valued at $12 million and runs through 2025, according to the LVCVA. The partnership covers 15 races over two Formula One seasons.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Stewart-Haas Racing, a two-time NASCAR championship team with 69 Cup Series victories since its 2009 formation, will close its organization at the end of this season.
Co-owners Tony Stewart and Gene Haas announced the decision after nearly a year of rumors that their four-car Cup Series team was looking to sell its charters and exit the stock car series.