- Brooklands
:"There is also a type of
windscreen known as "Brooklands" or "Brookland screen"."Motorsport venue
Name = Brooklands | Location =Surrey ,England
Length_km = 4.2
Length_mi = 2.75
Turns = 3
Surface = Concrete
Banking = 30°
Opened = 1907
Closed = 1939Brooklands is a disused motor racing circuit and airfield built near
Weybridge inSurrey ,England . It opened in 1907, and was the world's first oval-style motorsport venue. The circuit hosted its last race in 1939, and was also one of Britain's first airfields. Nowadays it plays host to an aviation and motoring museum, as well as various vintage car rallies.History
The circuit was the brainchild of
Hugh Locke-King , and was opened onJune 17 1907 as the first custom-built banked motor race circuit in the world. It was the second ever oval style race track built for cars, the first being the convert|2|mi|km|0|sing=on ovalLakeside Auto Speedway near San Diego, California, which was opened onApril 20 ,1907 .Requirements of speed and spectator visibility led to the track being built as a convert|100|ft|m|-1|abbr=on wide, convert|2.75|mi|km|1 long, banked oval. The banking was nearly convert|30|ft|m|0 high in places. In addition to the oval, a bisecting "finishing straight" was built, increasing the track length to convert|3.25|mi|km|1, of which convert|1.25|mi|km|1 was banked. It could host up to 287,000 spectators in its heyday.Fact|date=February 2007
Due to the complications of laying tarmac on banking, and the expense of laying asphalt, the circuit was built using gravel and cement. This led in later years to a somewhat bumpy ride, as the surface settled over time.
Along the centre of the track ran a dotted black line, known as the "Fifty Foot Line". By driving over the line, a driver could theoretically take the banked corners without having to use the steering wheel.
Eleven days after the circuit opened, it played host to the world's first 24 hour motor event, with
Selwyn Edge leading three specially converted Napier cars around the circuit. Over three hundred red railway lamps were used to light the track during the night. Flares were used to mark the upper boundary of the track. Edge drove his car for the full duration, with the drivers of the other two cars taking the more familiar shift approach.The world record for the first person to cover a hundred miles in an hour was set by
Percy E. Lambert at Brooklands, on15 February 1913 when driving his 4.5 litre sidevalve Talbot. He actually covered 103 miles and 1470 yards (167.340 km) in sixty minutes. There is a film of his exploits at the Brooklands museum which was made on that day.Grand Prix motor racing was established at Brooklands in 1926 byHenry Segrave after his winning of theFrench Grand Prix in 1923 and the following year at theSpanish Grand Prix which raised interest in the sport in Britain. This first British Grand Prix was won by Louis Wagner and Robert Senechal driving a Delage 155B.During the late 1930s, Brooklands also hosted massed start
cycle racing events organised by theNational Cyclists' Union (as the sport's governing body, the NCU banned such events from public roads). In 1939, it was used as a location for theWill Hay film,Ask a Policeman . [ [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0031058/ Ask A Policeman] ]When
World War II broke out in 1939, racing was stopped due to fuel rationing. After the war completed in 1945, it was deemed that racing cars were too fast for the banking, and no further racing took place.Brooklands Airfield
Brooklands also became one of Britain's first airfields. In 1908 it hosted the first flight of an English aircraft by an English pilot,
Alliott Verdon-Roe . In the summer of 1910,Hilda Hewlett andGustave Blondeau opened Britain's first flying school at Brooklands. Hewlett and Blondeau also started their aircraft manufacturing company, Hewlett & Blondeau Limited, on site before moving to larger premises atLeagrave ,Bedfordshire . In February 1912,Thomas Sopwith opened his Sopwith School of Flying and, in June 1912, Sopwith, with several others, set up theSopwith Aviation Company here, although their main premises were atKingston upon Thames . Blériot, Martinsyde, andVickers later set up production at Brooklands. Many flying schools operated here before 1914 and the aerodrome was a major flying training centre between the wars.In
World War II , the site was again used for military aircraft production, in particular theVickers Wellington and was extensively camouflaged. Trees were also planted into the concrete of the circuit to help screen the Hawker andVickers aircraft factories there. From 1944-72 Vickers (and later BAC) also used nearbyWisley aerodrome which offered a longerrunway and less built-up surroundings.After the war, the circuit was in poor condition and was sold to
Vickers-Armstrong s in 1946 for continued use as an aircraft factory. New aircraft types including the Viking, Varsity, Viscount, Vanguard and VC10 were next manufactured and delivered from there.In 1951, a section of the race track's Byfleet Banking was removed to allow
Vickers Valiant V-bomber s to be flown out to Wisley.The Vickers factory became part of the new
British Aircraft Corporation in 1960 and went on to design and build the BAC TSR.2, One-Eleven andConcorde . The factory contracted in size in the mid-1970s and finally closed in 1988-89.In 1987 the site also become home to the Brooklands Museum, which is dedicated to the site's motoring and aviation heritage.
Present day
The remaining sections of track were the subject of a preservation order in 2001, rendering illegal any subsequent destruction of the circuit. From 1990 to 2003 regular fly-ins, rallies attended by light aircraft, were arranged on summer weekends using the Northern half of the original runway. The central area of Brooklands including the hard runway and remaining racetrack was sold to
DaimlerChrysler UK Retail in early 2004. AMercedes-Benz museum and performance-demonstration centre is now completed in front of the remaining banking.Mercedes-Benz World opened to the public on29 October 2006 and incorporates a test track. The facilities also include a conference centre and a Mercedes-Benz showroom. Other stores which reside on the small retail park include aTesco ,Marks & Spencer ,Mothercare ,Currys andArgos .Brooklands houses many decommissioned aircraft including a
British Airways Concorde ,G-BBDG , the first pre-production Concorde built and more recently the "G-CONC"gate guardian from Heathrow. There are also many other aircraft there including aVickers Vanguard , Viscount, VC10 and many military aircraft. One feature of all the aircraft is that at least major components of them were built at Brooklands. The VC10 in particular was built and first flew from Brooklands Airfield and served as official transport for theSultan of Oman until 1987 when it was donated by the Sultan of Oman.Brooklands made a TV appearance when it featured in a 1990s episode of "
Agatha Christie's Poirot " whenHercule Poirot investigates a crime committed involving a racing driver. The banking of Brooklands was also used as a 'road location' in an episode of "The Bill " where the CID foiled an armed robbery and resulted in a 'shoot out'.Several thousand photographs of Brooklands in its heyday are available through the
Brooklands photo archive .People associated with Brooklands
*
J. G. Ballard
*Henry Birkin
*Sydney Camm
*John Cobb
*Malcolm Campbell
*Kaye Don
*George Eyston
*Frank Halford
*Hilda Hewlett
*Percy E. Lambert
*Hugh F. Locke-King
*Kishichiro Okura
*J.G. Parry-Thomas
*Henry Segrave
*Beatrice Shilling
*Thomas Sopwith
*Alliott Verdon-Roe
*Barnes Wallis
*Count Louis Zborowski
*H.C. Lamacraft Gallery
Hawker Hunter Vickers Vanguard Vickers Viscount Concorde Reg.G-BBDG Concorde originally from HeathrowVickers Wellington IA Serial Number N2980
car at Brooklands
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Riley car at Brooklands
Morgan three-wheeler at Brooklands
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Napier Railton at BrooklandsBentley at BrooklandsBicycle at BrooklandsNapier Lion W12 engine at BrooklandsRoutemaster owned by the museum for advertising.References
External links
* [http://www.brooklands.org.uk/ The Brooklands Society]
* [http://www.brooklandsmuseum.com Brooklands Museum]
* [http://www.mercedes-benzworld.co.uk/mbw/home.html Mercedes-Benz World]
* [http://www.weyriver.co.uk/theriver The River Wey and Wey Navigations Community Site] – a non-commercial site of over 200,000 words all about the Wey Valley including information and images about Brooklands, Weybridge and early automobile manufacture in England
* [http://maps.google.com/maps?q=weybridge,england&t=k&hl=en&ie=UTF8&ll=51.349003,-0.471232&spn=0.013161,0.042915&om=1 Google Maps Aerial View]
* [http://www.geocities.com/kelada2000/cars.htm Kaye Don at Hampton Wick]
* [http://www.theheightsbrooklands.com/ The Heights, Brooklands]
* [http://www.brooklandsfm.co.uk/ Brooklands FM - Local Radio for Brooklands and the surrounding area]
* [http://www.scientificamericanpast.com/Scientific%20American%201900%20to%201909/6/lg/sci7271907.htm 7/27/1907;The Opening Races And Speed Trials on the New Cement Track of the Brooklands Racing Club At Weybridge, England]
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