The Monaco Grand Prix is the most glamorous race in the world — 78 laps of the Circuit de Monaco through the streets of the Principality, where the barriers are close enough to touch from the grandstand and the elevation changes of Beau Rivage, the Casino Square hairpin, and the tunnel-to-chicane sequence produce the most technically demanding single circuit in Formula 1. The race has been held every year since 1929 (bar the wartime interruption) and holds a position in the cultural imagination that no other motorsport event replicates: the combination of the Principality's setting, the harbour full of superyachts, the celebrity spectator culture, and the specific quality of Formula 1 machinery navigating streets designed for traffic at 300 kilometres per hour makes Monaco the event that every serious motorsport enthusiast and every curious observer eventually places on the list.
The Alpine Grand Touring journey is designed around the argument that the Monaco Grand Prix deserves an arrival that matches its setting — not a flight to Nice and a helicopter transfer, but a supercar driven from Zürich through the Swiss and Italian Alps, across the Ligurian coast, and into Monaco via the Grande Corniche. The 1,100-kilometre route from Zürich to Monaco through the Julier Pass, the Maloja, Lake Como, and the French Riviera's coastal road constitutes the most complete grand touring itinerary in Europe: four countries, four mountain passes, two lakeshores, and a coastal road, with each day's destination matched to a hotel whose individual quality makes the non-driving programme as rewarding as the routes that connect them.
This seven-day itinerary stays at The Dolder Grand in Zürich (the 1899 forest castle above the city); Badrutt's Palace in St. Moritz (the hotel that invented the winter sports holiday in 1856); Villa d'Este on Lake Como (the 16th-century cardinal's villa converted to a hotel in 1873); and the Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo on the Casino Square (the 1864 palace hotel directly on the Grand Prix circuit, whose terrace overlooks the Virage du Bureau, Casino Square, and the start/finish straight).
Zürich to Monaco in a supercar — the Julier Pass, Maloja, Villa d'Este, the Corniche, and the Circuit de Monaco on race day.
The Monaco Grand Prix takes place annually in late May, the weekend before Memorial Day. The itinerary runs Zürich → St. Moritz → Lake Como → Monaco across four driving days, with the Grand Prix weekend on Days 5 and 6. Total driving distance approximately 1,100 kilometres. A support vehicle accompanies throughout; the Richseen driving specialist provides daily route briefings and manages all logistics.
Every Richseen grand touring journey is individually crafted. Supercar model selection, route variants, and hotel availability are confirmed at the time of booking. Monaco Grand Prix hospitality and yacht access require early engagement — the most sought-after positions are confirmed 12 months or more before the race.
Every detail — from your first alpine pass above the Engadin to the Casino Square on race morning — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.
From EUR 35,000+ per person
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