Vietnam to join Formula One Calendar from April 2020

The Vietnamese Grand Prix will be the fourth street race on the calendar along with Monaco, Singapore and Azerbaijan.

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Vietnam to join Formula One Calendar from April 2020
The Vietnamese Grand Prix will be a street race (AP Photo)

Vietnam will host its first Formula One Grand Prix in April 2020, organisers announced on Wednesday.

The Vietnamese Grand Prix will be a street race in the Southeast Asian country's capital city Hanoi.

The Grand Prix is the first new race announced since Liberty Media bought the commercial rights to the series.

"We are delighted to announce that Hanoi will host a Formula One Grand Prix," the sport's chairman Chase Carey said in a statement.

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"Since we became involved in this sport in 2017, we have talked about developing new destination cities to broaden the appeal of Formula One and the Vietnamese Grand Prix is a realisation of that ambition.

"We are thrilled to be here in Hanoi, one of the most exciting cities in the world right now with such a rich history and an incredible future ahead of it."

Vietnam's largest conglomerate, Vingroup JSC, has signed a "multi-year deal" to host the event, the press release said, without elaborating.

VinFast, a unit of Vingroup, is set to become Vietnam's first fully-fledged domestic car manufacturer when its first production models built under its own badge hit the streets next August.

The Hanoi round of the championship, which will be run on a 5.565-kilometre circuit in the west of Hanoi, will be the fourth street race on the calendar along with Monaco, Singapore and Azerbaijan.

Chairman of the Hanoi People's Committee Nguyen Duc Chung said the race would reflect Vietnam's ability to hold global events.

"It provides an opportunity for inward investment to Vietnam and importantly to bring the exciting wheel-to-wheel racing of Formula One to the people of Vietnam," he said.

Vietnam is a growing market for sponsors such as brewer Heineken and would be give East Asia four races on the calendar again after the departure of Malaysia.

While the country does not have much of a tradition of motorsports, sporting events or competitions in which the national team does even marginally well are widely watched and passionately celebrated.

There will again be 21 races on the 2019 calendar, with the same races as this year retaining their places.

(With inputs from Reuters)