infiniti 2013 grand prix travel guide #19 brazil
Transcription
infiniti 2013 grand prix travel guide #19 brazil
INFINITI 2013 GRAND PRIX TRAVEL GUIDE #19 BRAZIL 1 BRAZILIAN GRAND PRIX 21-24 November 2013 REMEMBER TO PACK: Plain clothes to wear to and from of the circuit. Team personnel are encouraged to wear t-shirts over their uniforms so as not to be targeted by armed thieves, who line the streets around the circuit. Keep your doors locked at all times! PRACTICAL INFO: TIME ZONE: GMT -3hrs INTERNATIONAL DIALING CODE: +55 CURRENCY: Brazilian Real EXCHANGE RATE: 1 BRL = 0.33 EUR TEXT © ADAM HAY-NICHOLLS / DESIGN: REALISE CREATIVE POLICE/FIRE/AMBULANCE: 911 2 TAXI COMPANIES: Airport Taxi – 33663375 Radio Taxis – 61970423 Cooperativa Use Taxi – 55832000 CIRCUIT ADDRESS: Jose Carlos Pace Autodrome Avenida Senador Teotonio Vilelia, 259 04801-890 Sao Paulo Brazil T: +55 11 5666 8822 OFFICIAL WEBSITE: autodromodeinterlagos.com.br Formula One is massively popular in Brazil, and the fans that line the grandstands are also the loudest that you’ll find at any track, cheering on the Brazilian drivers and banging their samba drums. The Interlagos circuit isn’t short on atmosphere. What it is short on are the state-of-the-art facilities that most of the circuits on the calendar provide. Another aspect of Interlagos, which should make one wary, are the instances of armed robbery which specifically target F1 personnel on the road outside the circuit gates. The population and environment of Sao Paulo is diverse, and districts within it range from extremely luxurious boulevards to the favelas of the poor. The division is further exacerbated by the fact that there are more helicopters here than in Manhattan and the wealthy elite fly back and forth from their mansions to city centre helipads, avoiding the traffic, poverty and crime below. 1 BRAZIL GP CIRCUIT GUIDE TURN 1 KM/H: 106 GEAR: 3 The Jose Carlos Pace Autodrome has some excellent corners and severe gradient changes, which are very popular with the drivers and make set-up a challenge. The focus is on optimal aerodynamic efficiency. An even more challenging aspect are the notorious bumps, which have a huge effect on the cars at speed, and require a high ride-height and soft suspension settings. The Interlagos track is very abrasive, so harder compound tyres are a must. The high altitude and thin air sap around eight percent of an engine’s power over a lap. The first corner, the Senna S, drops down from the start/finish straight and is often the scene of first lap incidents. Down at Turn 3, the marshland is home to many snakes and is the last place you want to suffer a breakdown. From here, the track runs back behind the paddock and this is where the most bone-shaking bumps are to be found, throughout the fast Turns 5 to 9. It’s through Juncao that the drivers need to get a particularly good exit, as the rest of the lap is flat-out from there, up the hill around the curving pit-straight. 2 TURN 3 KM/H: 257 GEAR: 5 SENNA S KM/H: 166 GEAR: 3 CURVA DO LARANJINHA KM/H: 231 GEAR: 5 LOCAL START TIME: 14h00 NUMBER OF LAPS: 71 CIRCUIT LENGTH: 4.309km RACE DISTANCE: 305.909km GRAND PRIX DEBUT: 1973 TURN 6 KM/H: 218 GEAR: 5 TURN 15 KM/H: 309 GEAR: 7 LAP RECORD: Juan Pablo Montoya (Williams, 2004), 1:11.473 TURN 8 KM/H: 76 GEAR: 2 2012 QUALIFYING RESULTS 1) Lewis Hamilton (McLaren) 2) Jenson Button (McLaren) 3) Mark Webber (Red Bull Racing) 4) Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing) 2012 RACE RESULTS: 1) Jenson Button (McLaren) 2) Fernando Alonso (Ferrari) 3) Felipe Massa (Ferrari) 4) Mark Webber (Red Bull Racing) 6) Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing) TURN 9 KM/H: 104 GEAR: 2 TURN 4 TURN 5 KM/H: 154 KM/H: 251 GEAR: 3 GEAR: 5 TURN 12 KM/H: 130 GEAR: 3 TURN 13 BICO DE PATO KM/H: 72 GEAR: 2 SUBIDA DOS BOXES KM/H: 276 GEAR: 6 MURGULHO KM/H: 235 GEAR: 5 3 SLEEP HILTON MORUMBI **** FASANO GP BRAZIL / SLEEP GP BRAZIL / SLEEP A popular hotel for teams, the Hilton’s facilities include a high-rise pool and wellappointed gym, smartly furnished rooms with nice big desks at which to work, beds so comfy you won’t be seen before lunchtime, and a bar where many a buttoned-up team principal has let his hair down. Downstairs, in the Shopping Nacoes Unidas, you have a good choice of restaurants. Full marks to the concierge at this hotel, for whom nothing is too much trouble. A: Av. das Nacoes Unidas 12901, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 2845 0000 ***** This understated and supremely elegant luxury boutique hotel’s décor hints at the 1940s but has all mod cons. Rooms have Eames chairs, leather headboards, parquet floors and huge windows. Its restaurant serves some of the best Italian cuisine in the country and its bar, Baretto, hosts a constant stream of jazz stars. It also has a breathtaking rooftop spa. A: Rua Vittorio Fassano 88, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 3062 4000 4 5 SLEEP HOTEL UNIQUE ***** A hotel that lives up to its name, the Unique looks like an abstract Noah’s Ark looming above the Jardins district. The 95 all-white bedrooms with wooden floors are unusually shaped and come with plasma TVs and remote controlled drapes. Flavio Briatore always took the Presidential Suite. The rooftop SKYE restaurant and bar is party central. A: Av. Brg. Luis Antonio 4700, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 3055 4710 GRAND HYATT ***** 6 TRANSAMERICA **** Once upon a time this was the most luxurious hotel in Sao Paulo. Now it’s starting to feel a little tired, but it’s still a popular choice and very convenient for Interlagos. The service is good, and the caipirinhas in the bar will knock your socks off. A: Av. das das Nacoes Unidas 18591, Sao Paulo / T: +55 11 5693 4050 GP BRAZIL / SLEEP GP BRAZIL / SLEEP Located opposite the Hilton (although for safety’s sake you’re advised to cab it rather than walk between the two), the Hyatt offers typically luxurious rooms with tremendous power showers, indoor and outdoor pools, and three restaurants. Kinu, which serves modern Japanese cuisine, is one of the best restaurants in town. A: Av. das Nacoes Unidas 13301, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 2838 1234 7 EAT G P B R A Z I L / E AT JAM WAREHOUSE $$$$ Sao Paulo is home to the largest Japanese community outside of Japan. So it’s no surprise that stellar sushi is to be found here. One of the best joints is Jam, which is on a level with Nobu and has prices to match. This is where Rubens Barrichello stocks up on sashimi and sake. The tempura is whisper thin and the presentation is, well, art basically. A: Rua Lopes Neto 308, Itaim Bibi, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 3473 3273 8 9 EAT D.O.M $$$$$ Run by Brazil’s top chef, Alex Atala, he takes Brazilian ingredients – black beans, codfish, ferofa – and gives them a French twist. The result is worth writing home about. The service is impeccable, but you might need that English-Portuguese dictionary, for little ingles is spoken here. A: Rua Barao de Capanema 549, Jardins, Sao Paulo / T: +55 11 3088 0761 FIGUEIRA RUBAIYAT $$$$ 10 here, the house specialty is beef, raised on the owner’s personal cattle ranch. The oysters and grilled prawns here make an excellent entrée. A: Rua Haddock Lobo 1738, Jardins, Sao Paulo / T: +55 11 3087 1399 POMODORI $$$$ One of the most popular Italian restaurants in a city that’s plentiful with them. The place is a loving homage to the northern trattorias of Milan and Turin. Ossobuco is served with risotto Milanese and bone marrow; rabbit is rustically roasted and perfumed with black truffle. The miniscule kitchen must break the world record for cooks per square metre. A: Rua Dr Renato Paes de Barros 534, Sao Paulo / T: +55 11 3168 3123 the start. There are three locations in Sao Paulo – try to eat at the original. A: Av. Moreira Guimaraes 964, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 5056 1795 FOGO DE CHAO $$$$ You may end up eating here every night of your stay – that’s what most of the paddock does. It’s the most famous churrascaria in town, and in exchange for a wad of Reals you will be fed and watered until you burst. You’re given a beer mat that’s red one side, green the other. When you fancy more food, flip it to green. The waiters carve at the table, and the meat is simply sublime. Be picky, though, because they’ll try to fill you up on the cheaper parts of the animal at G P B R A Z I L / E AT G P B R A Z I L / E AT The most beautiful restaurant in Sao Paulo enables diners to eat outdoors, indoors! It’s built around the spreading limbs of an old fig tree. Like most of the places you’ll visit EAT 11 DRINK DRINK GP BRAZIL / DRINK GP BRAZIL / DRINK ASTOR The Astor draws upon discerning Paulistas in search of boho surroundings, cold beers, and cocktails with a kick. Once you’ve nailed a couple of sake-caipirinhas, there’s a speakeasy-style club downstairs: The Sub Astor. A: Rua Delfina 163, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 3815 1364 DROSOPHYLA A secret garden hideaway with incredible cocktails, Drosophyla’s décor is charmingly chaotic and colorful, in contrast to the quiet doorway on a gloomy street on which it’s found. The men’s toilets are decorated 12 with hilarious filthy images of vintage women’s underwear adverts. The crowd is very mixed, with bright young things and aging party animals, and there’s a terrific buzz. A: Rua Pedro Taques 80, Consolacao, Sao Paulo / T: +55 11 3120 5535 Z CARNICERIA This hipster hangout is found in a former beef-packing shop, which lay dormant for 20 years until being repurposed. The interior remains faithful; stark white-tiled walls and a meat counter bar top. There are even a few meat hooks dangling from the ceiling. DJs move in late in the evening and the place has a fantastic buzz, staying open well into the mid morning at weekends. A: Rua Augusta 934, Bela Vista, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 2936 0934 LA in downtown SP. A: Av. Brigadeiro Luis Antonio 4700, Jardim Paulista, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 3055 4710 SKYE BAR FRANGO There’s no better place to enjoy the Sao Paulo skyline at night, caipirinha in hand, than this stylish restaurant on the top floor of Hotel Unique – itself a prized location among visiting supermodels and music video directors, which has been built in the shape of the ark. You can dance with the beautiful people on the open-air deck, absorb the uninterrupted views or take a dip in the inviting roof-top pool. A slice of This bar/restaurant specializes in beer, and there are over 250 different brews from which to choose. Try some of the Brazilian beers from small local breweries like Colorado Indica IPA. Order with a side of pork scratchings – simply the best in the world! A: Largo da Matriz Nossa Sra do Ó, 168 Freguesia do Ó, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 3932 4818 13 PARTY G P B R A Z I L / PA RTY PACHA International super-brand Pacha’s Sao Paulo outpost is a stucco-fortress, and features an arena-style main dance room, and sprawling lounges and terrace. When Kimi Raikkonen clinched his title, he came here to make everyone cocktails. Lewis Hamilton was on the wheels of steel that night. But Thriller does appear to be the only thing in his record bag. A: Rua Mergenthaler 829, Vila Leopoldina, Sao Paulo / T: +55 11 2189 3700 14 15 PART Y DISCO G P B R A Z I L / PA RTY G P B R A Z I L / PA RTY So fancy it doesn’t need a proper name, this trendy club is kitted-out with glittering, futuristic décor, although the music remains more electro and chart dance hits than bighair disco. Dress up and bring plenty of money, as the drinks and cover charge are pricey. A: Rua Atilio Inocennti 160, Vila Olimpia, Sao Paulo / T: +55 11 3078 0404 BAR SECRETO So exclusive they don’t even have a phone number. The all-black drinking den features retro lamps, burning candles, leather couches, oil paintings and old furniture, and there are curtained-off rooms upstairs for clandestine schmoozing. Madonna hired the whole place for a party a few years ago, and Bono once sang karaoke here. A: Rua Alvaro Anes 97, Pinheiros, Sao Paulo LOTUS Any club that puts the coordinates of its helipad on its website has to be pretty upscale. This is the sister club to the famous Lotus in New York, and was the scene of Fernando Alonso’s celebrations when he won his first title with Renault back in ’05. A: Rua Eng. Mesquita Sampaio 807, Santo Amaro, Sao Paulo / T: +55 11 4301 3372 16 17 SHOP DASLU Shopping malls are to Sao Paulo what Versailles was to France: All about style and power. The most upscale mall, or ‘shopping’ as they are simply known here, is Daslu. Celebrities and the wealthy elite touch down by helicopter before loading up with Gucci and Dior shopping bags. The place is vast – a 17,000 square meter maze of retail opportunities, which uniformed staff will happily guide you through. Strategically-placed espresso bars are on hand every couple of hundred meters, to keep you energized. A: Av. Chedid Jafet 131, Sao Paulo SHOP T: +55 11 3841 4000 RUA OSCAR FRIERE Named after the physician who developed the city’s first morgue, this tree-lined street is far from dead. It is alive with some of the biggest brands – both international and homegrown – including Diesel, Fendi, Alexandre Herchcovitch and Osklen. According to a survey, this street is the second most glitzy in the Americas, after Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue. In your face, Rodeo Drive! A: Rua Oscar Friere, Sao Paulo MERCADO MUNICIPAL The city’s first grocery market, this enormous neo-baroque building has recently undergone a major renovation, and is now the quintessential hotspot for food lovers. There are over 300 stands selling anything edible, including meat, veg, cheese, fish and spices from all over Brazil. There are several bars and snack places inside, where you can scoff while you take in the local color. Don’t miss the salt cod pastel at Hocca Bar. A: Rua da Cantareira 306, Centro, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 3228 0673 GP BRAZIL / SHOP GP BRAZIL / SHOP 18 19 TOURISM TOURISM FOOTBALL IBIRAPUERA PARK CEMITERIO DO MORUMBI Sao Paulo’s answer to New York’s Central Park, this is one of the city’s biggest green areas – two square kilometers, in fact. Everyday thousands come jogging, walking and picnicking here. The buildings here were designed by Oscar Niemeyer, including the Museum of Contemporary Art. This contains the biggest collection of 20th Century Western art in Latin America, with works by Picasso, Miro, Kandinsky and Chagall. A: Av. Pedro Alvares Cabral 0, Sao Paulo T: +55 11 5574 517 The final resting place of Ayrton Senna da Silva is in contrast to the bold life that he led. His is a small, modest plaque, set among many others, on a grassy slope that gazes out at the non-descript highrises of Morumbi. The brass plaque reads: ‘Nada pode me separar do amor de Deu’. It means: ‘Nothing can separate me from the love of God’. Or from the love of his fellow Brazilians and F1 fans around the world. A: Rua Deputado Laercio Corte 468, Morumbi, Sao Paulo / T: +55 11 3759 1000 20 Charles Miller s/n, Pacaembu, Sao Paulo MEMORIAL DA AMERICA LATINA Designed by Brazil’s architectural maestro Oscar Niemeyer (who has also designed trophies for the Brazilian Grand Prix), this impressive complex is a monument to Latin America’s long and bloody battle for democracy. The centre includes photographs and museum pieces, some impressive and symbolic sculpture, such as the famous ‘big hand’, and an auditorium where diverse leaders Bill Clinton and Fidel Castro have given speeches. After the GP in 2008, Red Bull threw a big party here with a DJ set by Gorillaz. A: Avenida Auro Soares M Andrade 564, Sao Paulo / T: +55 11 3824 6112 21 G P B R A Z I L / T O U R I SM G P B R A Z I L / T O U R I SM Estadio do Morumbi is home to Sao Paulo Football Club and hosts the state championship games, known as ‘classicos’ which take place on Wednesday and Saturday nights. Tickets are R$30-$120. Soccer is Brazil’s greatest passion, and the atmosphere of 80,000 fans is electric. It was in this stadium back in 2006 that Red Bull threw what is generally considered to be the greatest party in the history of Formula One. Another place football fans should visit is the Museu do Football, which is at the Corinthians stadium, Estadio do Pacaembu. Pele keeps his 1970 World Cup Final shirt here. A: Estadio do Morumbi, Praca Roberto Gomes Pedrosa 1, Sao Paulo / A: Museu do Football, Estadio do Pacaembu, Praca ROADTRIP COSTA VERDE 22 G P B R A Z I L / R O A DT R I P G P B R A Z I L / R O A DT R I P The drive from Sao Paulo, via Santos, to Rio de Janiero along the coast-hugging Costa Verde takes about eight and a half hours, and there are several beautiful port towns along the route where you may wish to take a little holiday. Paraty is considered one of the most romantic spots in the world, full of pastel-colored colonial buildings, and the stunning Ilha Grande is just a short boat ride away. The coast road – officially named the Rodoviário Doutor Manoel Hyppolito Rêgo, or BR101 – has several “trechos sinuosos”, zigzagging roads that wind up steep hills. The climbs open up vistas of the many beaches on Sao Paulo’s northern coast – 33 of them. Some are long, surferfriendly, classically Brazilian; others are coves at the foot of cliffs. The Costa Verde is celebrated for these beaches, and also for its wilderness. Nature here is exuberant: palms burst from cliff walls, mist drifts over forested valleys, pink and orange flowers erupt on the roadside. Everywhere the jungle is invading, spilling over, reclaiming territory. The mountainous foliage, after 350 miles, makes way for the concrete of Rio and a whole different jungle. 23 va .D Av q Av. Se .I Av ra aio eM Tres d Senna da Silva n mi an gr tes e Av. Vinte res so T ava sI apo ta do rdo Ja das fet chi e AEROPORTO DE CONGONHAS Uni a do Li b an o Av. D Av. Jabaquara lic Av. Marg inal Pinh ei ros Av .I bi ra p ue ra ub Av. Ruben Berta r. Ric a Av. Sa An d Ro oes Nac nna eirantes Av. dos Band das Av .R ep y to Ro d Rod R o lh Ju de SAO PAULO Av. Gabriel Av. Sao Av .N ov e Av. Dom Pedro iro nto Am aro rg e iet io Ma ue n Se a .M Av T al in rg Ve yrto .A Tun Tre e iet R. ee int .V v A e sd DOWNTOWN-CIRCUIT Follow the line of the old river out of town on the Avenue Marginal Pinheiros. Then turn right onto Avenue Interlagos and follow the signs into the circuit. .M Av - ral ta aio ra si l tado ent ta C lis o Es lT na gi r a Pis Av .P au M ze de Av .B as uc Av. d AIRPORTS Sao Paulo Guarulhos Airport (GRU) is the city’s biggest airport, 25km from downtown Sao Paulo. Sao Paulo Congonhas Airport (CGH) is 8km outside the centre. Av. Aricanduva eira o ns Co a d R. Tre o eb .R Av iros a ng R. da Figu R. pi n. Que SAO PAULO ao lac alhado res s xia Ca e d Rod Pres. Dutra Sil Rod. d o as Di co ta E s Trab o na an Br aC os .A r Fe io rd Ro d d Ro .R Av Vevd. Pres. Art u 24 JOSE CARLOS PACE AUTODROME 25 WWW.INFINITI-GP.COM