Name
zMAX Dragway

Thumb
League Badge
Image Source: Unknown report



Next Event

None...

Established
0 (2025 years old)

Capacity
0

Build Cost


Architect


Country


Location


Timezone


Coordinates




Logo
no logo icon


Upcoming
None...

Results
tiny league badge icon 19 Sep NHRA 4-Wide Carolina Nationals
tiny league badge icon 25 Apr NHRA Four Wide Nationals
tiny league badge icon 22 Sep NHRA Carolina Nationals
tiny league badge icon 28 Apr NHRA Four Wide Nationals
tiny league badge icon 24 Sep NHRA Carolina Nationals
tiny league badge icon 25 Sep NHRA Carolina Nationals
tiny league badge icon 29 Apr Circle K NHRA Four Wide Nationals


Description
Available in: English Language icon

Charlotte Motor Speedway (known as Lowe's Motor Speedway from 1999 to 2009 due to sponsorship reasons) is a 1.500-mile (2.414 km) quad-oval intermediate speedway in Concord, North Carolina. It has hosted various major races since its inaugural season of racing in 1960, including NASCAR, IndyCar, and IMSA SportsCar Championship races. The facility is owned by Speedway Motorsports, LLC (SMI), with Greg Walter serving as its general manager. Charlotte Motor Speedway is served by U.S. Route 29.

The speedway has a capacity of 95,000 as of 2021. The track features numerous amenities, including a Speedway Club, condos, and a seven-story tower located on the complex for office space and souvenirs. In addition, the Charlotte Motor Speedway complex features numerous adjacent tracks, including a 1⁄5 mile (0.32 km) clay short track, a 2⁄5 mile (0.64 km) dirt track, and a 1⁄4 mile (0.40 km) long drag strip. The main track also features an infield road course that is used with the oval to make a "roval".

With the rise of popularity in stock car racing in the American Southeast that began in the late 1940s and stretched into the 1950s, racing promoter Bruton Smith sought to build a state-of-the-art facility. At the same time, driver and businessman Curtis Turner sought to do the same. After initially refusing, Turner eventually partnered with Smith after they agreed to sell shares needed for the track's construction. Charlotte Motor Speedway was constructed in less than 11 months. The facility immediately faced a litany of issues, particularly financial woes. Within the facility's first decade of existence, ownership changed hands numerous times, with Smith and Turner both leaving. After a period of stability under the ownership of Richard Howard from the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s, Smith and his new partner, racing promoter and eventual longtime track general manager Humpy Wheeler, completed a takeover of Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1976. Since then, the Smith family and their company, SMI, have directed the facility's expansion and growth into one of the largest sports facilities in the United States.
wikipedia icon cc icon

Tennants

none found...


Collections
None found...

Fanart search icon
no fanartno fanart
no fanartno fanart

Other Links