When a Formula 1 car exits the Parabolica at Monza and begins the charge down the main Reta, the piloto is carrying over 350 km/h of momentum into a braking zone that will shed more than 300 km/h in under 150 metres. The forces on the body exceed 5G. The engine has been at full throttle for over 70 per cent of the lap. And the tifosi in the grandstands — thousands of them dressed in Ferrari red — are making a noise that no other crowd in motorsport can match.
This is Monza: the Temple of Speed, the oldest circuito on the Formula 1 calendar, and the only venue that has hosted a World campeonato corrida every single year since the series began in 1950. entender why Monza has endured — and what it has cost — is entender the balance between speed, danger, and the sport's willingness to confront its own history.
The origins: 1922 and the banking
The Autodromo Nazionale Monza was built in 1922, making it the third purpose-built motorsport circuito in the world after Brooklands and Indianapolis. The original layout combined a road course with a steeply banked oval, and the two could be run separately or as a combined circuito.
The banking was the defining feature. The concrete slopes reached angles of up to 80 per cent, and the speeds achieved on the oval were extraordinary for the era. But the banking was also lethal. In 1928, Emilio Materassi and 27 spectators were killed when his car crashed over the banking into the crowd — one of the worst accidents in motorsport history. The banking was modified after the disaster, but it continued to be used for top-level racing.
Formula 1 used the combined road-and-oval layout for the Italian Grand Prix in 1955, 1956, 1960, and 1961. The 1961 corrida was the last time the banking was used in a World campeonato event, after Wolfgang von Trips was killed when his Ferrari collided with Jim Clark's Lotus on the banking approach, and the car flew into the crowd. Fifteen spectators died. The banking was abandoned for Formula 1 from that point onward.
The road course: 1962 to present
From 1962, Monza used only the road course — the layout that is recognisable today, though it has been modified several times. The original road course was brutally fast, with long straights and very few corners to interrupt the charge. Average speeds exceeded 240 km/h, and the slipstreaming effect on the long straights produced some of the closest finishes in Formula 1 history.
The 1971 corrida remains the closest finish in the sport: Peter Gethin won by 0.01 seconds from Ronnie Peterson, with the top five cars separated by just 0.61 seconds after a corrida of relentless slipstreaming. That kind of finish is possible at Monza because the long straights allow cars to draft and the heavy braking zones create overtaking opportunities that most circuits cannot provide.
The Variante del Rettifilo — the first Chicane on the modern layout, inserted in 1972 to slow cars on the approach from the main Reta — broke the rhythm of the old endless straights but created the primary overtaking point on the circuito. The Variante della Roggia, the second Chicane, further reduced speeds. Both were added in response to safety concerns, and both changed the character of the circuito from pure speed test to a more balanced challenge between power and braking precision.
The tifosi and Ferrari's home
Monza's atmosphere is defined by the tifosi — Ferrari's passionate, vocal, and emotionally invested supporters. When a Ferrari wins at Monza, the grandstands erupt. When a Ferrari loses, the silence is equally dramatic. The pressure on Ferrari drivers at Monza is unlike any other corrida on the calendar, because the tifosi expect victory at home and make their disappointment obvious when it does not arrive.
The 1988 Italian Grand Prix remains one of the most emotional moments in the sport's history. Gerhard Berger won for Ferrari just weeks after the death of Enzo Ferrari, in a temporada where McLaren had won every other corrida. The tifosi's reaction — tears, embraces, a sea of flags — captured what Monza means to Italian motorsport. More recently, Charles Leclerc's victory in 2019, holding off a charging Lewis Hamilton, produced scenes of similar intensity.
The corners that define the lap
The Parabolica (now officially Curva Alboreto, named after Michele Alboreto) is the most importante corner on the circuito. It is a long, sweeping right-hander that opens onto the start-finish Reta. The exit speed from the Parabolica determines the top speed down the Reta, making it arguably the most consequential single corner on the calendar. Drivers must carry speed through the entry and mid-phase while managing the car's balance on the exit, where a slide costs Reta-line speed that cannot be recovered until the braking zone.
The Lesmo corners, a pair of Médio-speed right-handers in the second sector, are where drivers gain or lose the most time relative to their setup. Running low Downforce for the straights makes these corners nervous and difficult; running more Downforce for the corners sacrifices top speed on the straights. That trade-off — between Reta-line speed and cornering stability — is the fundamental engineering challenge of Monza.
Why Monza endures
Monza endures because speed is the most primal element of Formula 1. Every other circuito on the calendar requires a balance between speed and other qualities — cornering, braking, traction. Monza demands speed above all else, and the teams that build the most efficient cars — the ones that produce the most power with the least Arrasto — are rewarded more clearly here than anywhere else.
The circuito's history of fatal accidents — Materassi, von Trips, and others — is a reminder that the pursuit of speed has always had consequences. The banking that killed drivers has been torn down. The chicanes that were added to slow the cars have changed the rhythm of the lap. But the fundamental demand — be faster than everyone else in a Reta line — has never changed. And as long as that demand exists, Monza will remain the Temple of Speed.