Formula 1’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix will feature a one-off regulatory adjustment implemented by the FIA and introduced specifically to handle the expanded 22-car grid in Melbourne this weekend.
With the arrival of the Cadillac F1 team as the sport’s 11th entrant, the grid has swelled, prompting the governing body to temporarily amend the sporting regulations for the event at Albert Park Circuit.
The solution is straightforward but significant: the pit lane speed limit has been reduced from 80km/h to 60km/h for this race weekend only, reflecting the tighter working quarters inside one of the calendar’s more compact pit complexes.
Albert Park’s pit lane has long been among the narrower on the Formula 1 schedule, and accommodating an additional team has pushed the available space to its limits.
“It’s certainly a challenge,” admitted Australian Grand Prix Chief Events Officer Tom Mottram.
“Our pit building and pitlane are probably one of the smaller ones on the calendar at the moment, so we’ve done a lot of work with F1 throughout the year since we’ve known the 11th team is coming on board to make sure we’ve got additional team hospitality, additional freight storage, additional pitwall room and things like that.”
Despite extensive preparation, some constraints simply cannot be altered in time for this year’s race.
“The one thing that we can’t really change, unfortunately, at least this year, is the garage space.”
With garages fixed in size and cars now occupying more real estate, slowing pit lane traffic became the most practical safety measure for the FIA.
Mottram stressed that the change is a short-term compromise rather than a permanent feature.
“So it is a bit of a one-year stop-gap where it will be a bit of a squeeze,” he explained.
“It also meant we’ve had to reduce our pitlane speed from 80km/h to 60km/h, just because it will be a little bit tighter for teams to pull in.”
And while the adjustment by the FIA may slightly alter pit stop dynamics, the organisers believe the added excitement outweighs the inconvenience.
“But we wouldn’t change that for the excitement that will come with the 11th team in Cadillac,” Mottram concluded.
With Melbourne’s long-term contract running until 2037 and future infrastructure upgrades anticipated, this weekend’s slower pit lane is merely a temporary adaptation to Formula 1’s expanding grid – and a sign of a sport entering a bigger, busier new era.
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