Abilita la posizione geografica per una migliore esperienza.
logo
Giro Pilota Organizzazione Modificato Auto Modello Variazione Circuito
Auto
Auto Moto
Metrico
Metrico USA
Italian
English Spanish French German Portuguese Russian Japanese
Accedi / Crea Account
  • Circuiti
  • track_changes
    Giri
  • Auto
  • Trackday
  • Classifiche Pneumatici
  • Piloti
  • Informazioni
+ Add
Giro
Piloti
Organizzazione
Auto Modificato
Modello
Variazione Circuito
Italian
English Spanish French German Portuguese Russian Japanese
Auto
Auto Moto
Accedi / Crea Account
Modifica Rimuovi
++USER.DRIVER.DISPLAY_NAME++
++CREATED_AT++
++USER.ALIAS++
++CREATED_AT++
++COMMENT++
++NAME++ (++CITY++)
++COUNTRY++

Cologne

Trackday Circuiti Organizzazioni Piloti

Cologne won the German track day geography lottery: Nürburgring sits just 82 km west (barely 1h10 via A61—close enough for Saturday day trips), Spa-Francorchamps in Belgium positions 116 km southwest (1h20 via A1/E40—international F1 prestige without leaving Germany feel), and Bilster Berg as bonus 170 km east (Teutoburg Forest, premium private track). This proximity to two legendary circuits simultaneously creates unique situation: Nordschleife Touristenfahrten €30-35 per lap (March-November open nearly daily, 20.832 km "Green Hell" with 73 corners—dangerous, legendary, priceless), Spa's 7.004 km F1 track with Eau Rouge/Raidillon (RSRNurburg, GP Days, Europa Track Days coordinate events), Bilster Berg's 4.2 km Hermann Tilke design with 26% gradient "Mausefalle" corner (GP Days Open Pitlane from €389). Cologne-based enthusiasts juggle three philosophies: Nordschleife pilgrimages (accessible daily, cheap entry, massive risk), Spa premium weekends (F1 circuit prestige, Belgian frites, Ardennes landscape), Bilster Berg tech sessions (modern safety, blind corners, Nordschleife comparisons without death risk).

 

Nürburgring dominates Cologne's track day consciousness simply through proximity and history—82 km means after-work theoretically possible (unrealistic but technically feasible), Saturday Touristenfahrten become standard ritual for hardcore community. Nordschleife fascination is real: €30 buys access to track where Jackie Stewart named "Green Hell," where Niki Lauda nearly died 1976, where every year cars spectacularly crash while YouTube videos document. But Cologne's position also unlocks Spa-Francorchamps (116 km) as serious regular option—Belgian Grand Prix circuit since 1925, 7.004 km pure racing history with Eau Rouge as perhaps most famous corner worldwide. The 1.5-hour Cologne-to-Spa drive doesn't even feel like international travel (Aachen-Liège-Spa route flows naturally), making Cologners consider Spa "local-ish" despite technically Belgium. GP Days, RSRNurburg, and various European organizations coordinate Spa track days, typically pricier than Nordschleife (Spa is premium facility) but safer and technically challenging without Nordschleife's mortal danger element.

 

Bilster Berg (170 km east, Bad Driburg) entered discussion as Nordschleife alternative without death wish—4.2 km Tilke-designed track with 19 corners, 44 crests/troughs, blind corners, steep drops to 26% gradient, many compare it to Nordschleife but modern safety standards. GP Days organizes Open Pitlane track days there, GEDLICH Racing coordinates events, and membership model similar to exclusive drive resorts exists. Cologne's track day community developed distinct character: Nürburgring proximity means Nordschleife knowledge is assumed (every serious enthusiast has multiple Nordschleife laps), Spa access creates Belgian-German motorsport fusion culture, and Cologne's position as Rhine metropolis (Karneval city, Dom cathedral, urban center) brings relaxed attitude versus Stuttgart's engineering seriousness or Munich's wealth flexing. Practically, Cologne-based track days mean either: quick Nordschleife Saturday (1h there, several laps €30 each, 1h back, €100 total with fuel), Spa weekend pilgrimage (Friday departure, Saturday/Sunday track, Belgian beer culture enjoyed, Sunday return), or Bilster Berg occasions for tech focus without legacy baggage. The concentration of three major circuits within 2-hour radius makes Cologne arguably Germany's best-positioned major city for track day enthusiasts—not Munich's isolation, not Berlin's East Germany distance issues, but perfect Rhineland position between Germany/Belgium/Netherlands motorsport density.

Trackday

Nome
Circuito
Organizzazione
Data
Nome: Zolder
Circuito: Circuit Zolder
Organizzazione: Europa Trackdays
track.date: 2025-12-18
Circuiti
Circuito
Posizione
Lunghezza km
Giri
Tempo Medio
Media
kph
Media P/P
Distanza km
Circuito: Nürburgring
Località: Nürburg, Germany
Lunghezza km: 19.15
Giri: 498
Tempo Medio: 7:52.2
Media kph: 146
Media P/P: 0.26
Distanza: 108.7
Circuito: Mendig AFB Circuit
Località: Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Lunghezza km: 4.18
Giri: 66
Tempo Medio: 1:53.3
Media kph: 133
Media P/P: 0.29
Distanza: 110.4
Circuito: Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps
Località: Wallonia, Belgium
Lunghezza km: 7
Giri: 450
Tempo Medio: 2:51.2
Media kph: 150
Media P/P: 0.31
Distanza: 143.6
Circuito: Circuit Zolder
Località: Flanders, Belgium
Lunghezza km: 4.01
Giri: 102
Tempo Medio: 1:53.2
Media kph: 131
Media P/P: 0.26
Distanza: 191.5
Circuito: Circuit de Chimay
Località: Fosses-la-Ville, Belgium
Lunghezza km: 4.52
Giri: 1
Tempo Medio: 1:51.1
Media kph: 158
Media P/P: -
Distanza: 277.9
Circuito: Bilster Berg
Località: North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Lunghezza km: 4.26
Giri: 106
Tempo Medio: 1:57.1
Media kph: 135
Media P/P: 0.29
Distanza: 279.3
Circuito: Circuit Jules Tacheny Mettet
Località: Wallonia, Belgium
Lunghezza km: 2.32
Giri: 100
Tempo Medio: 1:14.4
Media kph: 112
Media P/P: 0.29
Distanza: 285.6
Circuito: Circuit Meppen
Località: Meppen, Germany
Lunghezza km: 2.41
Giri: 22
Tempo Medio: 1:23.2
Media kph: 104
Media P/P: 0.22
Distanza: 326.3
Circuito: Hockenheimring
Località: Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Lunghezza km: 4.57
Giri: 201
Tempo Medio: 2:00.5
Media kph: 141
Media P/P: 0.31
Distanza: 342.3
Circuito: TT Circuit Assen
Località: Drenthe, Netherlands
Lunghezza km: 4.55
Giri: 93
Tempo Medio: 1:58.7
Media kph: 139
Media P/P: 0.31
Distanza: 363.5

Organizzazioni

Avon

It manuue

Artega

It manuue

Opel

It manuue

GP Days

Track Day Org / HPDE School

Pistenclub

Track Day Org / HPDE School

Piloti

Christian Wachter

Christian Wachter is a young 19-year-old Formula 3 race car driver in FIA Central European Zone Championship and the Drexler Formula Cup.
He drove his first two international races in Formula racing at the age of 14 in September 2016 in Brno/ Czech Republic in a Formula BMW and came 2nd in both races in the class up to 1800 cc. Since 2017, Christian has been competing in his Formula 3 race car (Dallara 308/10 FPT). In his first Formula 3 season, he managed to finish 3rd in the overall standings of the 2017 German Formula 3 Cup.

Other successes include 2nd place in the 2018 Remus Formula Junior Trophy and a 2nd place finish in the 2019 Ravenol Formula 3 Cup season.
Since 2020, Christian has not only been a professional racing driver, but also an instructor at Polar Racing. His responsibilities include coaching young drivers in theory and practice.
In 2021, Christian will compete in the open class, the "E 2000" or in the "Open Formula"/ "Super Formula". The goal for 2022 is to compete in the FIA Formula 3 Championship. In addition to his mechanical engineering studies at the Technical University of Kaiserslautern, Christian pursues the hobbies of windsurfing, taekwondo (black belt and trainer's licence) and karting.

Lotusexigecupr

FNxR3DNECK

iTec

RobSpb

OneLapHeroes

Alex-KW

Ghettems Automotive

Simon e36

Commenti

Segnala Dati Errati
© 2025 LapMeta, LLC
Regole Termini di Servizio Informativa sulla Privacy Organizzazioni Locale Blog
Segnala Dati Errati