Richseen Private Journeys · Brazil

São Paulo Grand Prix: F1 at Interlagos

Formula 1 & Brazilian Culture — São Paulo · Interlagos · Rio de Janeiro · Iguaçu Falls
11 Days · 10 Nights
From USD 18,000+ per person
"Interlagos — Senna's home circuit, the most passionate crowd in Formula 1, and the most emotionally charged race weekend on the calendar."
The Journey

Passion,
Speed, and Brazil

The São Paulo Grand Prix at Interlagos is, by any measure of crowd passion and historical significance, the most emotionally charged race weekend on the Formula 1 calendar. The Autódromo José Carlos Pace in the southern suburb of Interlagos — named for the Brazilian driver who won the 1975 Brazilian Grand Prix at this track and died in an air crash the following year — has hosted Formula 1 since 1973. Ayrton Senna won here in front of his home crowd in 1991 and 1993; Emerson Fittipaldi and Nelson Piquet won world championships in cars built around the demands of this circuit; and the grandstands that fill with yellow and green for race weekend contain a combination of knowledge, passion, and partisanship that no other circuit on the calendar can replicate.

The São Paulo Grand Prix takes place annually at Interlagos, typically in November — making it one of the final rounds of the Formula 1 World Championship. The race has historically played a decisive role in championship outcomes, which intensifies the atmosphere of an event that is already conducted at an emotional register several degrees above the standard F1 race weekend. The circuit's anti-clockwise layout, the famous "Senna S" opening complex, the long back straight, and the variable weather that the São Paulo plateau produces at this time of year combine to make Interlagos the most technically unpredictable race of the season.

This eleven-day itinerary combines the complete race weekend with Brazil's most extraordinary destinations: São Paulo's world-class art museums and restaurant scene; Rio de Janeiro's Copacabana and the Christ the Redeemer statue above Guanabara Bay; the Amazon rainforest; and the Iguaçu Falls — where 275 individual waterfalls spread across 2.7 kilometres of the Brazil-Argentina border in a display of geological force that makes Niagara Falls seem modest by comparison. Brazil is among the most geographically and culturally varied countries on Earth; eleven days addresses the highlights without pretending to exhaust them.

Signature Moments

Six Encounters
with Brazil

Interlagos — where the yellow and green crowd is the most knowledgeable and the most passionate in Formula 1. And then: the Amazon, Iguaçu, and Rio.

01
Interlagos — Senna's Circuit, Yellow and Green
The Autódromo José Carlos Pace — where Ayrton Senna won in front of his home crowd in 1991 and 1993, and where the grandstands fill with a combination of knowledge, passion, and partisanship that no other circuit on the F1 calendar can replicate. The Senna S opening complex; the long back straight; the variable São Paulo plateau weather that makes this the most technically unpredictable race of the season.
02
Iguaçu Falls at Dawn — Before Any Other Visitor Arrives
275 waterfalls across 2.7 kilometres of the Brazil-Argentina border — the Devil's Throat in the morning light, the permanent rainbow above the gorge, and the spray creating the micro-climate that sustains the surrounding Atlantic Forest. The Belmond Hotel das Cataratas guests are admitted before the park opens; the Falls in this condition are a different experience entirely from the midday visitor programme.
03
Christ the Redeemer — Guanabara Bay from Above
The 30-metre statue at 710 metres above Rio de Janeiro — the bay, the Sugarloaf, Ipanema, and Copacabana laid out below in the particular morning clarity that Rio produces when the humidity has not yet built. The view that Copacabana Palace guests see from the other direction: the mountain watching the city, and the city arranged around the mountain.
04
São Paulo — MASP and the Restaurant Scene That Surprised the World
The Museu de Arte de São Paulo on Paulista Avenue — the building designed by Lina Bo Bardi in 1968, suspended above a public plaza on two concrete beams in the most structurally audacious gesture in Brazilian architecture. The Vila Madalena neighbourhood for the street art that has made it Southeast Asia's most photographed urban canvas, and D.O.M. for the New Brazilian cuisine that Alex Atala has been building since 1999.
05
The Amazon — Flooded Forest by Boat at First Light
A dawn boat excursion into the flooded várzea forest accessible from Manaus — the same river system that contains ten percent of all species on Earth, in the conditions of the Amazonian dry season when the water level reveals the forest floor and the wildlife concentrates around the remaining water sources.
06
Copacabana at Six in the Morning — Before Rio Claims the Day
The Copacabana beachfront at dawn — the mosaic promenade, the fishermen returning before the sunbathers arrive, and the Belmond Copacabana Palace's facade catching the morning light from the south. The 4-kilometre arc of beach that has been defining what a city beach can be since 1904, when the Avenida Atlântica was built and Rio decided that the ocean was a public amenity rather than a border.
Curated Highlights

What Defines This Journey

01🏁
Interlagos — Senna's Home Circuit
The Autódromo José Carlos Pace at Interlagos — the 4.309-kilometre anti-clockwise circuit where Ayrton Senna won in front of his home crowd in 1991 and 1993, and where the yellow-and-green grandstands produce the most passionate crowd atmosphere in Formula 1. The "Senna S" opening complex, the Ferradura, and the long back straight: a circuit that has been deciding world championships for five decades.
02🌊
Iguaçu Falls — The World's Greatest Waterfall System
The Iguaçu Falls span 2.7 kilometres along the Brazil-Argentina border — 275 individual falls in a horseshoe configuration that produces a permanent rainbow and a sound audible from 25 kilometres away. The UNESCO World Heritage Site on both sides of the border; the walkways that place visitors within metres of the largest individual falls; and the boat excursion that approaches the base of the Devil's Throat from the Argentine side.
03🏔️
Rio de Janeiro — Christ the Redeemer and Guanabara Bay
Rio de Janeiro from the summit of Corcovado mountain — the Christ the Redeemer statue at 710 metres, with Guanabara Bay, Sugar Loaf Mountain, and the Atlantic coastline visible in every direction. Copacabana and Ipanema; the Santa Teresa neighbourhood; the Selarón Steps; and the Carnaval-adjacent sambadrome that produces the most visually extraordinary annual festival on Earth.
04🎨
São Paulo Art Scene — MASP and Ibirapuera
The Museu de Arte de São Paulo — Lina Bo Bardi's 1968 building suspended above Paulista Avenue on two concrete beams, housing the most important collection of Western art in the southern hemisphere. The Ibirapuera Park complex: the MAM (Museum of Modern Art), the Oca, and the Japanese Pavilion in the 158-hectare park that Oscar Niemeyer designed for São Paulo's fourth centenary celebrations in 1954.
05🌿
Amazon Rainforest — The World's Greatest Ecosystem
An optional extension to Manaus — the Amazon city accessible by air, from which river expeditions into the Anavilhanas Archipelago and the Jaú National Park provide access to the most biodiverse ecosystem on Earth. Pink river dolphins, giant otters, caimans, and the remarkable phenomenon of the Meeting of the Waters where the black Rio Negro and the brown Rio Solimões flow side by side for 6 kilometres without mixing.
06🍽️
São Paulo Culinary Scene — The Gastronomic Capital of South America
São Paulo has more restaurants per capita than any city in South America — and a culinary tradition that draws on Brazilian, Italian, Japanese, and Lebanese heritage in proportions found nowhere else. The Liberdade district's Japanese food market; the Mercado Municipal's mortadella sandwiches; and the contemporary restaurants of Vila Madalena and Pinheiros that have placed São Paulo on the global gastronomy map.
Sample Itinerary

Key Moments & Movements

The São Paulo Grand Prix takes place annually at Interlagos, typically in November as one of the final rounds of the Formula 1 World Championship. The race weekend spans three days: free practice, qualifying, and the race. The variable weather of the São Paulo plateau at this time of year frequently produces rain that transforms the circuit's characteristics entirely — making Interlagos one of the most tactically unpredictable races of the season.

Every Richseen journey is individually crafted. Race dates and hotel allocations are confirmed upon ticket issuance for the relevant season. The programme described reflects the standard São Paulo Grand Prix weekend format.

Day 1
São Paulo Arrival
Arrive at São Paulo Guarulhos International Airport and transfer to the hotel — the Blue Tree Premium Paulista or equivalent, positioned on Paulista Avenue with MASP and Ibirapuera Park within practical reach. Evening: the Vila Madalena neighbourhood for the street art, bars, and restaurants that represent São Paulo's most creative district at its most accessible to the arriving visitor.
Blue Tree Premium Paulista (or equivalent)
Day 2
Ibirapuera Park · MAM · São Paulo Cathedral
Morning: Ibirapuera Park — Oscar Niemeyer's 158-hectare park in the south of the city, with the MAM (Museum of Modern Art) for the Brazilian modern art collection; the Oca pavilion; the Japanese Pavilion; and the lake that provides the reflective surface for the entire complex. The Pátio do Colégio — the courtyard where the Jesuit missionaries founded São Paulo in 1554, now the site of a museum and the oldest church in the city. The Metropolitan Cathedral for the Neo-Gothic interior that seats 8,000 in the largest Gothic cathedral in Brazil.
São Paulo
Day 3
MASP · Liberdade · F1 Practice
Morning: MASP — the Museu de Arte de São Paulo on Paulista Avenue, suspended above the street on two concrete beams in Lina Bo Bardi's 1968 building that has been described as the most radical museum interior in Latin America. The Liberdade district for lunch — São Paulo's Japanese neighbourhood, the largest Japanese community outside Japan, where the food market on Saturday afternoon is the most concentrated expression of Japanese-Brazilian culture available anywhere. F1 Free Practice at Interlagos in the afternoon.
Autódromo José Carlos Pace — Practice
Day 4
Mercado Municipal · Pinacoteca · F1 Qualifying
Morning: the Mercado Municipal — the 1933 Neo-Renaissance market building in the historic centre where the mortadella sandwich served at Hocca Bar has been the most photographed food in São Paulo for thirty years. The Pinacoteca do Estado — São Paulo's oldest art museum, in a 1905 building renovated by Paulo Mendes da Rocha, with the most complete collection of Brazilian art from the nineteenth century to the present. F1 Qualifying at Interlagos in the afternoon — the session that determines the starting grid, which at this championship-critical stage of the season is often the most tactically significant hour of the weekend.
Autódromo José Carlos Pace — Qualifying
Day 5
F1 Race — São Paulo Grand Prix
Race day at the Autódromo José Carlos Pace — the São Paulo Grand Prix, 71 laps of the 4.309-kilometre Interlagos circuit, with the grandstands full of yellow and green and an atmosphere that has been described by multiple world champions as unlike any other race weekend. The "Senna S" opening sequence, the Ferradura hairpin, the long back straight, and the weather that São Paulo provides on race day with complete disregard for the season forecasts. One of the most significant events on the Formula 1 calendar.
Autódromo José Carlos Pace — Race Day
Days 6–7
Rio de Janeiro — Christ, Copacabana, and Santa Teresa
Flight to Rio de Janeiro. Day 6: the Corcovado rack railway to the Christ the Redeemer statue at 710 metres — the most recognisable monument in South America, with panoramic views of Guanabara Bay, Sugar Loaf Mountain, and the Atlantic coastline. Ipanema and Copacabana beaches in the afternoon. Day 7: the Santa Teresa neighbourhood — the hillside bohemian quarter of colonial mansions and artists' studios connected to the city centre by the historic bonde tram; the Selarón Steps; and the Jardim Botânico for the royal palms planted in 1809 and the Atlantic Forest orchid collection.
Rio de Janeiro
Days 8–9
Iguaçu Falls — The Devil's Throat
Flight to Foz do Iguaçu for two days at the Iguaçu Falls system. Day 8: the Brazilian side — the panoramic walkway that provides the widest perspective of the 2.7-kilometre waterfall arc, with 275 individual falls visible from the elevated trail above the gorge. Day 9: the Argentine side — the walkway system that approaches the Devil's Throat (Garganta del Diablo) from above and from the water level, and the boat excursion that moves to the base of the largest falls in conditions of complete saturation. The most spectacular waterfall system on Earth, experienced from both countries.
Iguaçu Falls
Days 10–11
Return to São Paulo · Departure
Return flight to São Paulo for a final evening before departure. A morning in the Pinheiros neighbourhood — São Paulo's most considered district for contemporary design, bookshops, and the kind of coffee culture that only a city with eleven million people and serious standards can produce. Private transfer to Guarulhos International Airport for onward journey.
São Paulo Guarulhos International Airport
Luxury Stays

Where You Rest Matters

Paulista Avenue, São Paulo, Brazil
São Paulo — 5 Nights
Blue Tree Premium Paulista (or equivalent)
Paulista Avenue, São Paulo, Brazil
Positioned on Paulista Avenue — the commercial and cultural spine of São Paulo, with MASP at walking distance and Ibirapuera Park accessible by taxi or metro. The most operationally practical base for the race weekend, with Interlagos accessible by metro (Line 9) and the city's cultural circuit within practical reach in every direction.
Santa Teresa, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Rio de Janeiro — 2 Nights
Belmond Copacabana Palace (or equivalent)
Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
The most considered address on the Copacabana seafront — a 1923 white palace directly facing the Atlantic, with views across the bay to Sugar Loaf Mountain and the Corcovado beyond. The most historically significant hotel in Rio de Janeiro, and the most appropriate base from which to understand the city at its most characteristic.
Foz do Iguaçu, Brazil
Iguaçu — 2 Nights
Belmond Hotel das Cataratas (or equivalent)
Iguaçu National Park, Brazil
The only hotel located inside the Iguaçu National Park — a 1958 colonial-style property that allows guests to access the falls at dawn and dusk, before and after the day visitors. The ability to walk to the falls at first light and at sunset, without the crowds that arrive from Foz do Iguaçu after 9 AM, is the defining advantage of the park's only hotel.
Exclusive Experiences

Moments Designed for You

🏁
Formula 1
Senna S — The Most Emotional Corner in F1
The "Senna S" — the double-apex opening complex of the Interlagos circuit, named for the three-time world champion who won here in front of his home crowd in 1991 in one of the most emotionally charged race victories in the history of the sport. Standing at this corner during race weekend, with the grandstands full and the yellow-green flags in every direction, provides a specific understanding of what Formula 1 means to Brazil.
🌊
Natural Wonder
Iguaçu Falls at Dawn — Before the Crowds
The Iguaçu Falls at first light — when the park opens exclusively to Belmond Hotel das Cataratas guests and the 2.7-kilometre waterfall arc is visible without another visitor in the frame. The Devil's Throat in the morning light, with the permanent rainbow above the gorge and the spray creating the micro-climate that sustains the surrounding Atlantic Forest: one of the most extraordinary natural experiences in South America.
🏔️
Icon
Christ the Redeemer — Rio at Its Most Legible
The Corcovado rack railway to the Christ the Redeemer statue — the 30-metre Art Deco figure completed in 1931 that has been the most recognisable image of Rio de Janeiro for almost a century. From the viewing platform at 710 metres: Guanabara Bay, Sugar Loaf Mountain, the Maracanã, the Atlantic coastline north and south, and the city below in a clarity that the Rio weather provides perhaps fifty days a year. One of those fifty is worth planning around.
🎨
Art
MASP — The Most Radical Museum in Latin America
The Museu de Arte de São Paulo — Lina Bo Bardi's 1968 building suspended above Paulista Avenue on two exposed concrete beams, with a freespan interior of 74 metres that has never been replicated in museum architecture. The collection: Raphael, Velázquez, Rembrandt, Cézanne, Van Gogh, Picasso, and the most complete assemblage of Brazilian modern art in a single institution. The most important art museum in the southern hemisphere, in the most architecturally radical building in Brazilian modernism.
Visual Journey

Through the Lens

Begin Your Story

Craft Your
Private Journey

Every detail — from your first evening in São Paulo to your final morning above Iguaçu — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.

From USD 18,000+ per person

Request This Journey