Richseen Private Journeys · Abu Dhabi

Abu Dhabi Grand Prix: F1's Season Finale

Formula 1 Season Finale — Yas Marina Circuit · Yas Island · Abu Dhabi
7 Days · 6 Nights
From USD 28,000+ per person
"Yas Marina Circuit — the season finale, where dusk becomes night and world championships are decided under a thousand floodlights."
The Journey

Season Finale
at Yas Island

The Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at the Yas Marina Circuit has occupied the final position on the Formula 1 calendar since its inaugural running in 2009 — making it, almost always, the race that closes the World Championship, resolves the final standings, and provides the season's concluding dramatic moment. The Yas Marina Circuit is the most architecturally ambitious venue in Formula 1: Hermann Tilke's 5.281-kilometre track on Yas Island wraps around a marina, passes under the W Hotel's illuminated lattice bridge, and conducts its race — which begins at dusk and concludes under full floodlights — against a backdrop of the Gulf and the Abu Dhabi skyline that no other circuit can replicate. The twilight-to-night transition produces the most visually dramatic hour in Formula 1, when the circuit's lighting system creates conditions that television cameras render more dramatically than they appear in person, and which appear in person more dramatically than any photograph prepares the visitor for.

The Abu Dhabi Grand Prix takes place annually at the Yas Marina Circuit, typically in November or December — the final round of the Formula 1 World Championship. The race has decided world championships (Hamilton vs Rosberg in 2016; Hamilton vs Verstappen in 2021) and has produced the kind of strategic complexity that final-round racing generates when the points standings are close enough to make the outcome genuinely uncertain until the final lap. Yas Island itself is a purpose-built leisure destination: theme parks (Ferrari World, Warner Bros. World), the Yas Waterworld, luxury hotels, shopping malls, and the beach club culture that the Abu Dhabi government has been developing since the island's construction began in 2006.

This seven-day itinerary combines the complete race weekend with Abu Dhabi's most considered cultural experiences: the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque — one of the largest and most architecturally complete mosques in the world — the Louvre Abu Dhabi (designed by Jean Nouvel), the Manarat Al Saadiyat cultural district, and the desert safari that the city's position at the edge of the Rub' al Khali makes available within an hour's drive. Abu Dhabi is a different register of the Gulf experience from Dubai: quieter, less frantic, more architecturally considered, and in possession of the world's single most valuable collection of oil revenues that have been systematically invested in cultural infrastructure since 2007.

Signature Moments

Six Encounters
at the Season Finale

The race that closes the Formula 1 World Championship — where dusk becomes night over the Gulf and championships are decided in the final laps.

01
Yas Marina — Dusk to Night, the Season's Final Act
The race that begins as the Gulf sun sets behind the Abu Dhabi skyline and concludes under full floodlights — the most visually dramatic hour in Formula 1, when the circuit's lighting system creates conditions that appear in person more dramatically than any photograph prepares the visitor for. The W Hotel's illuminated lattice bridge above the track; the marina below; and the season's final standings becoming real on the pit wall screens.
02
W Abu Dhabi — The Hotel That Straddles the Circuit
The W Abu Dhabi on Yas Island — the hotel whose illuminated lattice bridge is literally part of the Yas Marina Circuit, with Formula 1 cars passing beneath it at race speed. The most unusually positioned hotel in motorsport: circuit-facing rooms with direct track views from the bedroom window. The paddock within walking distance; the marina at the doorstep; and the race-weekend atmosphere that the Yas Island resort concentration produces more completely than any other F1 venue.
03
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque — Islamic Architecture at Its Peak
The most significant piece of Islamic architecture completed in the twenty-first century — 82 marble domes, 1,000 columns, and the world's largest hand-knotted carpet in the main prayer hall. At dusk, when the external lighting activates and the white marble takes on the colour of the final sky register, the mosque produces the most photographed single architectural image in the Arabian Peninsula.
04
Ferrari World — Formula Rossa at 240 km/h
Ferrari World Abu Dhabi on Yas Island — the world's largest indoor theme park under the distinctive red roof, housing Formula Rossa (the world's fastest roller coaster at 240 km/h), the GT simulator, and the Ferrari heritage exhibition that provides the most concentrated exposure to Italian automotive culture available outside Maranello. Adjacent to the Yas Marina Circuit: the Yas Island experience at its most concentrated.
05
Louvre Abu Dhabi — Where 600 Works Span All of Human History
The Louvre Abu Dhabi on Saadiyat Island — Jean Nouvel's dome of interlocking geometric patterns that creates a rain of light on the galleries below, housing 600 works spanning 5,000 years of human artistic production across every culture simultaneously. The first universal museum in the Arab world: the collection organised by theme rather than by region or period, making connections between Mesopotamian, Islamic, European, and contemporary art that no other museum on Earth has attempted at this scale.
06
Desert Safari — The Empty Quarter at Dawn
The Rub' al Khali — the Empty Quarter, the world's largest continuous sand desert — at the hour before the heat builds and the dunes in the morning light produce the colour gradient that makes this landscape one of the most visually distinctive environments on the planet. Dune driving, camel trekking, and the Bedouin camp dinner under a sky that the absence of any competing light source makes as clear as any visible from inhabited land.
Curated Highlights

What Defines This Journey

01🏁
Abu Dhabi Grand Prix — F1's Season Finale
The Yas Marina Circuit at 5.281 kilometres — the race that closes the Formula 1 season, where world championships are decided and the twilight-to-night transition produces the most visually dramatic hour in the sport. 58 laps, the W Hotel illuminated above the circuit, the Gulf as backdrop, and the floodlights creating conditions that have made Abu Dhabi the most photographed circuit on the calendar after Monaco.
02🕌
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque — One of the World's Greatest
The Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque — completed in 2007, capable of accommodating 41,000 worshippers simultaneously, with a main prayer hall covered by the world's largest hand-knotted carpet (5,627 square metres, 1,200 artisans, two years of production), 82 white marble domes, and four 107-metre minarets. The most significant piece of Islamic architecture completed in the twenty-first century, and the most visited tourist destination in Abu Dhabi.
03🎨
Louvre Abu Dhabi — Jean Nouvel's Museum of Humanity
The Louvre Abu Dhabi — Jean Nouvel's 2017 building on Saadiyat Island, whose 180-metre perforated aluminium dome produces the "rain of light" effect as sunlight filters through 7,850 stars of varying geometry. The collection: works spanning antiquity to the contemporary, organised thematically rather than by period or geography, with loans from the Louvre Paris and the permanent collection growing annually from the Louvre's expertise. The most architecturally significant new museum building of the twenty-first century.
04🎢
Ferrari World — The World's Largest Indoor Theme Park
Ferrari World Abu Dhabi on Yas Island — the world's largest indoor theme park, under the distinctive red roof shaped like a Ferrari GT car's cross-section, housing Formula Rossa (the world's fastest roller coaster at 240 km/h), the GT simulator, and the Ferrari factory experience that provides the most concentrated exposure to the Italian automotive heritage available outside Maranello. Adjacent to the Yas Marina Circuit: the Yas Island experience at its most concentrated.
05🏜️
Desert Safari — The Arabian Peninsula Interior
The desert safari from Abu Dhabi — an hour's drive from the city, where the Rub' al Khali (Empty Quarter) begins: the largest continuous sand desert in the world, where the dune topography changes with every wind cycle and the silence at sunset produces the most complete absence of urban noise available within driving distance of any Formula 1 circuit. 4WD dune driving; camel riding; and the Bedouin camp dinner under a sky that no urban light source competes with.
06🌆
Yas Island — Resort, Race, and the Gulf
Yas Island as a complete leisure destination: the Yas Marina Circuit for F1; Ferrari World and Warner Bros. World for theme parks; Yas Waterworld for the Gulf-side water park; the Yas Mall for luxury retail; and the beach club and hotel culture of the W, the Yas Viceroy, and the Anantara that have made the island a self-contained resort destination for those who arrive for the race and find reasons to stay. The Gulf visible from every elevated position on the island.
Sample Itinerary

Key Moments & Movements

The Abu Dhabi Grand Prix takes place annually at the Yas Marina Circuit, typically in November or December as the final round of the Formula 1 World Championship. The race begins at dusk and concludes under full floodlights — producing the most visually dramatic race conditions on the calendar. Yas Island's resort infrastructure makes it the most self-contained F1 race weekend destination in the world, with accommodation, entertainment, and the circuit all within walking or short shuttle distance.

Every Richseen journey is individually crafted. Race dates and hotel allocations are confirmed upon ticket issuance for the relevant season.

Day 1
Abu Dhabi Arrival — Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque
Arrive at Zayed International Airport and transfer to the hotel on Yas Island or in the city centre. Afternoon: the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque — the most significant piece of Islamic architecture completed in the twenty-first century, with 82 marble domes, 1,000 columns, and the world's largest hand-knotted carpet covering the main prayer hall floor. The mosque is at its most photogenic at dusk, when the external lighting activates and the white marble takes on the colour of the sky's final register. Open to non-Muslim visitors daily except Friday morning.
Yas Island Hotel (W Abu Dhabi or equivalent)
Day 2
Louvre Abu Dhabi · Saadiyat Island · F1 Practice
Morning: the Louvre Abu Dhabi on Saadiyat Island — Jean Nouvel's 2017 museum whose 180-metre aluminium dome creates the "rain of light" effect across the galleries below. The collection organised thematically across twelve permanent galleries: from the first human artefacts through the Silk Roads to the contemporary, with loans from the Louvre Paris and partner institutions. The waterfront plaza between the galleries and the Gulf. F1 Free Practice at the Yas Marina Circuit in the late afternoon — the sessions that begin as the sun descends and the circuit's floodlight system activates.
Yas Marina Circuit — Practice
Day 3
Ferrari World · Yas Mall · F1 Qualifying
Morning: Ferrari World Abu Dhabi — Formula Rossa at 240 km/h (the fastest roller coaster in the world); the GT simulator experience; and the Ferrari factory and design heritage exhibition that provides the context for the cars being driven on the adjacent circuit. The Yas Mall for lunch — the most complete luxury retail environment on Yas Island. F1 Qualifying in the late afternoon: the session at Abu Dhabi that produces the starting grid under the most dramatic lighting conditions of any qualifying session on the calendar, as the sun sets behind the Abu Dhabi skyline and the circuit's floodlights take over.
Yas Marina Circuit — Qualifying
Day 4
F1 Race — Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
Race day at the Yas Marina Circuit — the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, 58 laps of the 5.281-kilometre Yas Island circuit, starting as the Gulf sun sets over the Abu Dhabi skyline and concluding under the full floodlight system that makes the Yas Marina Circuit the most visually dramatic race venue on the Formula 1 calendar. The season finale: the race that closes the World Championship, resolves the final standings, and has decided world titles by margins as small as a single point and as dramatic as the final corner of the final lap.
Yas Marina Circuit — Race Day
Day 5
Abu Dhabi City — Corniche · Heritage Village · Al Maryah
A day in Abu Dhabi city: the Corniche promenade — the 8-kilometre seafront boulevard along the breakwater, with the city's financial district towers behind and the Gulf in front, where the morning walk provides the clearest perspective on the scale and ambition of the capital that oil revenue has constructed since 1971. The Abu Dhabi Heritage Village at the Breakwater — a reconstruction of the pearl-fishing and Bedouin settlement that preceded the oil era. Al Maryah Island for the afternoon: the financial free zone with the Cleveland Clinic and the Galleria mall, representing the post-oil economic diversification that Abu Dhabi has been planning since 1970.
Abu Dhabi City
Day 6
Desert Safari — Dunes, Camels, and Arabian BBQ
Full-day desert safari: an hour's drive from Abu Dhabi into the beginning of the Rub' al Khali — the Empty Quarter, the largest continuous sand desert on Earth. 4WD dune driving through the orange dune landscape; camel riding with the confidence that the animals have been navigating this terrain for several thousand years; sandboarding on the steeper faces; and the Bedouin-style camp for the Arabian BBQ dinner as the desert night produces the complete absence of light pollution that makes the Milky Way directly visible without any optical assistance. The most complete contrast to four days at the most technically advanced motorsport venue in the world.
Arabian Desert
Day 7
Departure — Abu Dhabi
Final morning on Yas Island — the Warner Bros. World for those with energy remaining after six days; or the Yas Waterworld beach club for the Gulf-side morning that provides the most straightforwardly pleasant conclusion to a race week. Private transfer to Zayed International Airport for onward journey.
Luxury Stays

Where You Rest Matters

Yas Marina Circuit, Yas Island, Abu Dhabi
Yas Island — 6 Nights
W Abu Dhabi — Yas Island (or equivalent)
Yas Marina Circuit, Yas Island, Abu Dhabi, UAE
The W Abu Dhabi straddles the Yas Marina Circuit — the hotel's illuminated lattice bridge is literally part of the circuit, with Formula 1 cars passing beneath it during the race. The most unusually positioned hotel in motorsport: guests in the circuit-facing rooms have a direct view of the track from their bedroom windows. The most operationally convenient address on Yas Island for the race weekend, at an unambiguously reasonable cost relative to the experience it provides.
Exclusive Experiences

Moments Designed for You

🏁
Formula 1
Dusk to Night — The Most Dramatic Race Transition
The Abu Dhabi Grand Prix begins at dusk — the sun setting over the Gulf behind the Abu Dhabi skyline, the circuit's floodlights activating progressively as the race continues, and the Yas Marina architecture visible as a complete lit structure for the first time as the natural light fails. The transition from daylight to floodlight racing, which the Abu Dhabi circuit produces with consistent regularity every year, is the most visually dramatic moment in the Formula 1 calendar outside of Monaco's own particular atmosphere.
🕌
Architecture
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque at Dusk
The Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque at the moment the external lighting activates at dusk — when the white Macedonian marble changes colour from the warm yellow of the late afternoon sun to the cool blue of the LED system, and the 82 domes begin their evening display. The world's largest hand-knotted carpet covers 5,627 square metres of the main prayer hall, woven by 1,200 artisans over two years in Iran; the 1,000 columns lining the outer courtyards are each inlaid with semi-precious stones from Swarovski.
🎨
Culture
Louvre Abu Dhabi — Rain of Light
Jean Nouvel's Louvre Abu Dhabi at midday — when the perforated aluminium dome's 7,850 geometric stars create the "rain of light" effect across the galleries and water below, filtering the Gulf sun into patterns that shift as the earth's rotation changes the angle of incidence throughout the day. The effect is most intense between 11 AM and 1 PM; the collection beneath it spans 5,000 years of human creativity in twelve galleries that refuse to organise themselves by period or geography.
🏜️
Desert
Rub' al Khali — The Empty Quarter at Sunset
The Rub' al Khali desert at sunset from the top of a major dune — the Empty Quarter, the largest continuous sand desert on Earth at 650,000 square kilometres, where the dune colour changes from gold to orange to red as the sun descends and the absence of any human structure in any direction makes the scale legible in a way that no urban landscape can achieve. The same sunset light that has been providing the same view to the Bedouin communities who have been navigating this terrain for millennia.
Visual Journey

Through the Lens

Begin Your Story

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Private Journey

Every detail — from your first evening at the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque to your final morning above the Gulf — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.

From USD 28,000+ per person

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