What does the Misano Formula E circuit look like?

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What does the Misano Formula E circuit look like?

Get familiar with Formula E's latest circuit, as it prepares to host Rounds 6 and 7 on 13 and 14 April.

Misano-Formula E-Season 10

Formula E will be racing at a new location once again, this time heading to the famous Misano circuit for some non-stop action over the double-header race weekend. 

For the World Championship's first visit to the Italian track, the circuit will run to 3.381km with 14 turns and clockwise, infield at Turns 1, 2, 3 and 4 before returning to the GP layout down towards what will be Turn 5 and the Turn 7 hairpin. A high-speed straight follows into a sharp left-right at Turns 8 and 9 before another fast sprint around the complex at the back of the circuit before hooking back through Turn 14 onto the home straight.

BUY TICKETS: Experience the 2024 Misano E-Prix 

The paddock area, featuring the garages where teams and drivers prepare the GEN3 race cars and plan racing strategy, will be located in the circuit's purpose-built paddock and pit-lane.

Misano arial shot

It's a rapid, flowing track with plenty of overtaking opportunities and room for manoeuvres! 

Misano will be familiar to all motorsport fans as a circuit featuring as a regular on the MotoGP and WorldSBK calendars for years, as well as endurance and sportscar racing, Ferrari Challenge, DTM, FIA Formula 3 and Formula 4 plus everything else in-between.

READ MORE: The full Season 10 calendar

The Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli, or Misano Circuit Sic 58, is located in the Rimini province of Italy and was designed in 1969 before opening in 1972. Since 2007 it's been a fixture on the MotoGP calendar, with local hero and seven-time World Champion, motorcycle racing legend Valentino Rossi, a multiple winner on home soil.