Richseen Private Journeys · United Kingdom

British MotoGP: Silverstone's Maggotts-Becketts

MotoGP World Championship · Silverstone Circuit · London · Oxford · Cambridge · Stonehenge
11 Days · 10 Nights
From USD 10,000+ per person
"Silverstone — MotoGP's highest-speed permanent circuit, where the Maggotts-Becketts complex rewards the brave and punishes hesitation."
The Journey

MotoGP, London,
and the English Summer

The British MotoGP at Silverstone Circuit is the fastest permanent circuit in the World Championship — where the 5.9-kilometre layout of the former Royal Air Force base produces average lap speeds that no other permanent MotoGP venue can match, and where the Maggotts-Becketts-Chapel complex of high-speed corners is described by MotoGP riders with the same reverence that Formula 1 drivers apply to the same section: as the most demanding sustained sequence of fast corners in motorcycle racing, where the commitment required at 200 km/h through linked lefts and rights in the English summer wind is the most direct test of nerve and chassis confidence that the calendar provides. Valentino Rossi won here nine times; Jorge Lorenzo, Marc Márquez, and Casey Stoner all consider the Silverstone lap among the most satisfying in the World Championship.

The British MotoGP Grand Prix takes place annually at Silverstone Circuit in Northamptonshire, typically in August — the height of the English summer, when the Silverstone paddock fills with the teams and suppliers who are all, almost without exception, based within 100 kilometres of the circuit. The concentration of MotoGP technical expertise in this single English county — the same geography that makes Silverstone the home of Formula 1 engineering — gives the British Grand Prix a paddock atmosphere unlike any other event on the calendar: the home race for the majority of the technical staff who run every team on the grid.

This eleven-day itinerary combines the complete race weekend with London's most considered cultural experiences — the British Museum, the National Gallery, the Tate Modern, the Tower of London, and the Thames cruise — and the English countryside circuit that connects Silverstone to Oxford, Cambridge, Stonehenge, and Bath. The itinerary is structured to use the days before the race for London and the post-race period for the cathedral cities and prehistoric monuments that make Wiltshire and the Cotswolds the most culturally compressed landscape in England.

Signature Moments

Six Encounters
with Great Britain

Silverstone — MotoGP's fastest permanent circuit. And London, Cambridge, the Cotswolds, and Stonehenge to complete the itinerary.

01
Silverstone — Maggotts-Becketts at Full Commitment
The Maggotts-Becketts-Chapel complex — the sequence of linked high-speed corners where MotoGP bikes are taken at sustained speeds that produce the highest lateral G-forces of any corner sequence in the World Championship. 200 km/h through alternating lefts and rights, where commitment is total and hesitation is punished immediately. The Becketts grandstand provides the most technically informative single viewing position in British MotoGP.
02
The British Museum — The Rosetta Stone and the Parthenon Sculptures
The Rosetta Stone in Gallery 4 — the 196 BCE granodiorite stele that unlocked three thousand years of Egyptian civilisation in 1822. Adjacent: the Parthenon sculptures in the Duveen Gallery, the 2,500-year-old frieze removed by Lord Elgin between 1801 and 1812, whose interpretation remains actively contested between London and Athens. Two objects whose significance exceeds any building designed to hold them.
03
Cambridge — The Backs, King's Chapel, Punting the Cam
The Backs at Cambridge — the sequence of college lawns descending to the Cam, with King's College Chapel's fan vaulting above and the river below. Punting from the Mill Pond past Clare, King's, Trinity, and St John's: the most comprehensible way to see what this university looks like from inside. The punting skill takes ten minutes to acquire and twenty years to perfect; the view from the water is available immediately.
04
Stonehenge at First Light — 5,000 Years of Astronomical Precision
The sarsen stone circle on Salisbury Plain before the organised tours arrive — the heel stone and its midsummer sunrise alignment, accurate for 5,000 years; the bluestones transported 240 kilometres from Wales by means still partially disputed; and the burial culture that surrounded the monument through 1,500 years of active construction. The most visited prehistoric monument in Britain, at its most legible in the early morning light.
05
Whittlebury Hall — Three Kilometres from the Circuit
Whittlebury Hall, three kilometres from the Silverstone circuit — the country house hotel and spa whose race weekend packages are structured around the circuit programme, with direct road access to parking and the Champneys spa providing the post-race recovery that three days of grandstand attendance at 330 km/h requires. The most operationally convenient luxury address for the British MotoGP weekend.
06
Shangri-La at The Shard — London at 310 Metres
Floors 34 to 52 of Renzo Piano's 310-metre glass pyramid above London Bridge station — the highest hotel pool in Western Europe, and the view that encompasses the Thames, the City, and 35 kilometres of visibility on a clear day. Borough Market and the Tate Modern within walking distance; the most theatrically positioned hotel address in London, and the correct base for an itinerary that uses the city as its cultural anchor.
Curated Highlights

What Defines This Journey

01🏍️
British MotoGP — Fastest Permanent Circuit
Silverstone Circuit: 5.9 kilometres, 18 corners, and the highest average lap speed of any permanent circuit in MotoGP. The Maggotts-Becketts-Chapel complex; the Copse and Stowe fast corners; and the British crowd whose technical knowledge of motorcycle racing — in the country where the majority of MotoGP teams are headquartered — makes this one of the most informed spectating environments on the calendar. Full three-day access: practice, qualifying, Sprint Race, and the Grand Prix.
02🏛️
British Museum — Eight Million Objects
The British Museum in Bloomsbury — the world's largest collection of human history and culture, with eight million objects from every civilisation and every period, open to the public since 1759 and never charging admission. The Rosetta Stone; the Elgin Marbles; the Sutton Hoo helmet; the Lewis Chessmen; and the Egyptian mummy collection that remains the most comprehensive outside Egypt. The most visited museum in the United Kingdom, and the most encyclopaedic available anywhere.
03🌑
Stonehenge — Five Thousand Years of Aligned Stone
Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain — the Neolithic monument constructed between 3000 and 1500 BCE, whose 25-tonne sarsen stones were transported from Marlborough Downs 25 kilometres away and whose bluestones came from the Preseli Hills in Wales 240 kilometres distant. The midsummer sunrise alignment through the Heel Stone that has been accurate for 5,000 years; the scholarship that has been attempting to explain it with equal consistency; and the particular English atmosphere of a field in Wiltshire where something important happened that no one can fully account for.
04🎓
Oxford and Cambridge — Double University Visit
Oxford's Bodleian Library — copyright deposit library since 1610, where the Radcliffe Camera provides the most photographed academic building in England. Cambridge's King's College Chapel — begun by Henry VI in 1446, with the fan vaulting ceiling that remains the most technically ambitious stone ceiling in England. Punting on both the Cherwell and the Cam: the flat-bottomed boat propelled by a pole that represents English university leisure at its most photogenic.
05🛁
Bath — Roman Baths and Georgian Architecture
Bath — the Roman city of Aquae Sulis, where the hypocaust heating system beneath the Great Bath has been operating continuously since the first century CE. The Georgian Royal Crescent — John Wood the Younger's 1774 semi-ellipse of 30 townhouses, the most coherent single piece of urban domestic architecture in Britain. The Jane Austen Centre on Gay Street, where Bath's most famous resident is documented in the city she immortalised without appearing to love.
06🏰
Tower of London and Windsor Castle
The Tower of London — William the Conqueror's White Tower of 1066, the Crown Jewels in continuous use since the fourteenth century, and the Yeoman Warder tours that cover a thousand years of English royal history in forty-five minutes. Windsor Castle — the largest inhabited castle in the world, where ten British monarchs are buried in St George's Chapel and the Long Walk's three-kilometre avenue frames the castle against the Berkshire landscape.
Sample Itinerary

Key Moments & Movements

The British MotoGP Grand Prix takes place annually at Silverstone Circuit in Northamptonshire, typically in August. The race weekend includes the Sprint Race on Saturday and the Grand Prix on Sunday. Silverstone is 90 minutes from London by road or rail; the itinerary uses the pre-race days for London's cultural circuit and the post-race days for Oxford, Cambridge, Stonehenge, Bath, and Windsor Castle.

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

Day 1
London Arrival — Thames Cruise · Shard · Borough Market
Arrive at London Heathrow or Gatwick and transfer to the hotel in the City or Southwark. Afternoon: the Thames cruise from Westminster to Tower Bridge — Parliament, the South Bank, St Paul's Cathedral, and the Tower of London from the river. The Shard at dusk: the 310-metre Renzo Piano building in Southwark whose viewing deck at level 72 provides the most dramatic panorama of the city. Borough Market for dinner — the most complete food market in London, operating since the thirteenth century with considerably improved sourcing since then.
London Hotel (Shangri-La at The Shard or equivalent)
Day 2
British Museum · National Gallery · Tate Modern
Morning: the British Museum — the Rosetta Stone, the Elgin Marbles (Parthenon sculptures), the Sutton Hoo helmet, and the Lewis Chessmen in the galleries that have been displaying them since 1759. The National Gallery on Trafalgar Square for the afternoon: Van Eyck's Arnolfini Portrait, Velázquez's Rokeby Venus, Turner's Fighting Temeraire, and Seurat's Bathers at Asnières. The Tate Modern on the South Bank for the early evening — the turbine hall installation and the permanent collection in the former Bankside Power Station whose bold industrial interior provides the most dramatic museum space in London.
London
Day 3
Tower of London · Tower Bridge · Cambridge
Morning: the Tower of London — the Crown Jewels, the Traitors' Gate, and the Yeoman Warder tour. Tower Bridge Exhibition for the glass walkway above the Thames. Train north to Cambridge (50 minutes from King's Cross) for the afternoon: King's College Chapel for the fan vaulting ceiling; the Fitzwilliam Museum for the paintings; and punting on the Cam from Magdalene Bridge as the light falls across the Backs. Return to London by train or drive to the Silverstone area hotel.
Silverstone Area Hotel
Day 4
Oxford · MotoGP Practice
Morning: Oxford — the Bodleian Library for Duke Humphrey's Library above the Divinity School; Christ Church for the dining hall that served as the model for Hogwarts; the Radcliffe Camera and the Sheldonian Theatre; and punting on the Cherwell. Drive to Silverstone for MotoGP Free Practice in the afternoon — the first opportunity to hear the current generation of MotoGP prototypes at full speed through the Maggotts-Becketts complex, where the sustained lateral G-forces of the linked high-speed corners are most audible from the outer banking.
Silverstone Circuit — Practice
Day 5
MotoGP Qualifying + Sprint Race
Full day at Silverstone — MotoGP Qualifying in the morning session, where the Maggotts-Becketts-Chapel sequence produces the most aerodynamically and mechanically demanding lap in MotoGP, and where the qualifying time gap between the pole position and the second row determines whether the race can be won from the start or must be decided on strategy. The Sprint Race in the afternoon: 10 laps of the 5.9-kilometre circuit in conditions where the August wind variable changes which riders' setups are correct for the current configuration of the course.
Silverstone Circuit — Qualifying + Sprint
Day 6
British MotoGP Grand Prix
Race day at Silverstone Circuit — the British MotoGP Grand Prix, approximately 20 laps of the 5.9-kilometre circuit. The Maggotts-Becketts-Chapel sequence; the Copse corner where commitment at speed produces the most visceral spectating experience on the circuit; the Hangar Straight where the highest top speeds are achieved; and the final chicane where the race is most frequently decided in the closing laps. The home race for the majority of the MotoGP paddock's technical staff, and the race that the British crowd — technically the most informed in the World Championship — attends with the particular intensity of people who understand exactly what they are watching.
Silverstone Circuit — Grand Prix
Day 7
Stonehenge · Bath · Windsor Castle
Morning: Stonehenge — 30 minutes from Salisbury by road, the Neolithic monument in the state it has been in for 3,000 years and which has been generating explanation attempts for approximately as long. Bath: the Roman Great Bath with its lead-lined pool and the hypocaust heating system below; John Wood the Younger's Royal Crescent; and the Georgian Pump Room for the spa water that has been available here since the Romans arrived in 43 CE. Windsor Castle for the late afternoon: St George's Chapel, the Long Walk, and the State Apartments in their 1678 configuration. Return to London.
London
Days 8–9
London — V&A · Buckingham Palace · Notting Hill
Day 8: the Victoria and Albert Museum — the world's largest museum of applied arts and design, with 145 galleries covering 5,000 years of human craft. Buckingham Palace for the Changing of the Guard ceremony. Harrods in Knightsbridge for the food halls that represent British retail excess at its most architecturally confident. Day 9: Notting Hill for the Portobello Road antique market (operating since 1837); the Kensington Gardens for the Serpentine Gallery's summer pavilion; and the Covent Garden piazza for the street performers and the Royal Opera House stage door.
London
Days 10–11
Cotswolds · Departure
Day 10: the Cotswolds — the ridge of limestone hills between Chipping Campden and Cirencester where the honey-coloured stone villages of Bourton-on-the-Water, Bibury, and Burford represent the most photographed English rural landscape and the most concentrated expression of what the Cotswold wool trade produced in architectural terms between the fourteenth and seventeenth centuries. Day 11: final morning in London before private transfer to Heathrow Airport for onward journey.
London Heathrow Airport
Luxury Stays

Where You Rest Matters

Southwark, London, England
London — 7 Nights
Shangri-La at The Shard (or equivalent)
Southwark, London, England
The Shangri-La at The Shard — occupying floors 34 to 52 of Renzo Piano's 310-metre building, with the most dramatic urban hotel views in London. The Borough Market and the Tate Modern within walking distance; London Bridge Station for the Silverstone race day shuttle; and the Thames at the building's base. The most theatrically positioned hotel address in the city.
Silverstone, Northamptonshire, England
Silverstone — 3 Nights
Whittlebury Hall (or equivalent)
Whittlebury, Northamptonshire, England
Whittlebury Hall — the country house hotel and spa three kilometres from the Silverstone circuit, with direct road access to the circuit's parking and the most operationally convenient position for the three-day race weekend. The hotel's race weekend packages are structured around the circuit programme; the Champneys spa provides the post-race recovery that three days of grandstand attendance at 330 km/h typically requires.
Exclusive Experiences

Moments Designed for You

🏍️
MotoGP
Maggotts-Becketts — MotoGP's Greatest Corner Sequence
The Maggotts-Becketts-Chapel complex at Silverstone — the sequence of high-speed linked corners where MotoGP bikes are taken at sustained speeds that produce the highest lateral G-forces of any corner sequence in the World Championship, where the commitment required at 200 km/h through alternating lefts and rights is the most direct test of nerve and chassis confidence that the MotoGP calendar provides. The grandstand at Becketts provides the most technically informative single viewing position in British MotoGP.
🏛️
History
British Museum — The Rosetta Stone and the Elgin Marbles
The Rosetta Stone in British Museum Gallery 4 — the 196 BCE granodiorite stele whose parallel inscription in hieroglyphics, Demotic, and Greek provided the key to deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphics in 1822, changing the understanding of three thousand years of Egyptian civilisation in a single act of scholarship. The Parthenon sculptures adjacent — 2,500-year-old frieze sections that decorated the Parthenon before Lord Elgin removed them between 1801 and 1812, a sequence of events whose interpretation remains actively contested between Athens and London.
🎓
Academic
Punting on the Cam — The University from the Water
Punting on the Cam at Cambridge — the flat-bottomed boat propelled by a pole from the stern, navigating the river between the college lawns that descend to the water at King's, Clare, Trinity, and St John's. The Backs: the sequence of college gardens and lawns that provides the most consistently beautiful river view in English academia, and the most comprehensible single perspective on what Cambridge actually looks like from the perspective of the people who study and teach there. The punting skill takes ten minutes to acquire and twenty years to perfect.
🌑
Ancient
Stonehenge — The Most Productive Mystery in English Archaeology
Stonehenge at first opening — the sarsen stone circle on Salisbury Plain in the stillness before the organised tours arrive from Bath and Salisbury. The heel stone and its midsummer sunrise alignment that has been accurate for 5,000 years; the bluestones from the Preseli Hills in Wales whose transportation method remains partially disputed; and the burial culture that surrounded the monument for the 1,500 years of its active construction. The most visited prehistoric monument in Britain, at its most comprehensible in the early morning light.
Visual Journey

Through the Lens

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Every detail — from your first morning on the Thames to your final afternoon in the Cotswolds — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.

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