The Shanghai International Circuit in Jiading District is one of the most architecturally distinctive tracks on the Formula 1 calendar — its layout designed by Hermann Tilke to resemble the Chinese character "上" (shàng, meaning "above" or "superior"), which is also the first character of Shanghai's name. The 5.541-kilometre circuit, which opened in 2004 for the inaugural Chinese Grand Prix, combines a 1,175-metre main straight — one of the longest on the calendar — with the demanding Turn 1–Turn 6 hairpin complex and the Turns 10–12 sequence that tests lateral grip and downforce balance simultaneously. The circuit sits 30 kilometres from Shanghai's city centre, making it the most accessible major international circuit to a world-class metropolis of any race on the Asia-Pacific calendar.
The Chinese Grand Prix takes place annually at the Shanghai International Circuit, typically in late March or April — one of the early rounds of the Formula 1 season. The race returned to the calendar in 2024 after a five-year absence, and has featured the Sprint Race format in recent seasons, providing additional on-track action across the weekend. Shanghai itself — the 24-million-person city on the Huangpu River, where the Art Deco banking palaces of the Bund face the Pudong skyline's concentration of supertall towers — is one of the most visually extraordinary cities in the world, and one of the few that has undergone more architectural transformation since 1990 than any comparable urban area on Earth.
This five-day self-guided itinerary combines the complete race weekend with Shanghai's most considered cultural experiences: the Bund waterfront promenade, the French Concession's plane-tree boulevards and Art Deco villas, the Yu Garden's Ming Dynasty classical Chinese garden, the Xintiandi restored shikumen complex, and the Shanghai Museum's collection of bronze vessels, jade, and ceramics. Shanghai is a city that rewards the visitor who moves at its own pace — and the race weekend, which provides three days of afternoon and evening activity, leaves the mornings for the city.
Where the world's longest main straight meets the world's fastest commercial train — and the Bund, Yu Garden, and xiaolongbao complete the argument.
The Chinese Grand Prix takes place annually at the Shanghai International Circuit, typically in late March or April. The race is one of the early flyaway rounds of the Formula 1 season, and has featured the Sprint Race format in recent seasons. The circuit is 30 kilometres from Shanghai's city centre — accessible by metro (Line 11 to Jiading North) or race weekend shuttle. The morning hours, before the afternoon race sessions, are the optimal time for Shanghai's cultural circuit.
Every Richseen journey is individually crafted. Race dates, grandstand allocation, and hotel are confirmed upon ticket issuance for the relevant season. This is a self-guided itinerary; each day's pace is yours to determine.
Every detail — from your first morning on the Bund to your final view from the Shanghai Tower — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.
From USD 15,000+ per person
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