Month: May 2013

  • Brabham The Whole Story.

    Brabham

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
     
     
    For people with the surname Brabham, see Brabham (surname). For the place in Australia called Brabham, see Brabham, Western Australia.
    Brabham
    Brabham91.png
    Full name United Kingdom Motor Racing Developments, Ltd.
    Base Milton Keynes, United Kingdom
    Founder(s) Jack Brabham
    Ron Tauranac
    Noted staff Bernie Ecclestone
    Gordon Murray
    Ron Dennis
    Charlie Whiting
    John Judd
    Herbie Blash
    Noted drivers Australia Jack Brabham
    United States Dan Gurney
    United Kingdom Graham Hill
    New Zealand Denny Hulme
    Austria Niki Lauda
    Brazil Nelson Piquet
    United Kingdom Damon Hill
    Formula One World Championship career
    Debut 1962 German Grand Prix
    Races competed 402
    Constructors'
    Championships
    2 (19661967)
    Drivers'
    Championships
    4 (1966196719811983)
    Race victories 35
    Podiums 120
    Points 832
    Pole positions 40
    Fastest laps 42
    Final race 1992 Hungarian Grand Prix

    Motor Racing Developments Ltd., commonly known as Brabham /ˈbræbəm/, was a British racing car manufacturer and Formula One racing team. Founded in 1960 by two Australians, driver Jack Brabham and designer Ron Tauranac, the team won four drivers' and two constructors' world championships in its 30-year Formula One history. Jack Brabham's 1966 drivers' championship remains the only such achievement using a car bearing the driver's own name.

    In the 1960s, Brabham was the world's largest manufacturer of open wheel racing cars for sale to customer teams, and had built more than 500 cars by 1970. During this period, teams using Brabham cars won championships in Formula Two and Formula Three. Brabham cars also competed in the Indianapolis 500 and in Formula 5000 racing. In the 1970s and 1980s, Brabham introduced innovations such as the Gordon Murray designed "fan car"—which won its only race before being withdrawn—in-race refuelling, carbon brakes, and hydropneumatic suspension.

    The team won two more Formula One drivers' championships in the 1980s with Brazilian Nelson Piquet. He won his first championship in 1981 in the Ground effects BT49-Ford, and became the first to win a drivers' championship with a turbocharged car in 1983. In 1983 the Brabham BT52, driven by Piquet and Italian Riccardo Patrese, was powered by the BMW M12 Straight-4 engine, and powered Brabham to four of the team's 35 Grand Prix victories.

    British businessman Bernie Ecclestone owned Brabham during most of the 1970s and 1980s, and later became responsible for administering the commercial aspects of Formula One. Ecclestone sold the team in 1988. Its last owner was the Middlebridge Group, a Japanese engineering firm. Midway through the 1992 season, the team collapsed financially as Middlebridge was unable to make repayments against loans provided by Landhurst Leasing. The case was investigated by the United Kingdom Serious Fraud Office. In 2009, an unsuccessful attempt was made by a German organisation to enter the 2010 Formula One season using the Brabham name.

    Contents

      [hide

    Origins [edit]

    Jack Brabham was 40 when he won the F1 drivers' title in a Brabham car.

    The Brabham team was founded by Jack Brabham and Ron Tauranac, who met in 1951 while both were successfully building and racing cars in their native Australia. Brabham was the more successful driver and went to the United Kingdom in 1955 to further his racing career. There he started driving for the Cooper Car Company works team and by 1958 had progressed with them to Formula One, the highest category of open wheel racing defined by theFédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), motor sport's world governing body.[1] In 1959 and 1960, Brabham won the Formula One world drivers' championship in Cooper's revolutionary mid-engined cars.[2]

    Despite their innovation of putting the engine behind the driver, the Coopers and their Chief Designer Owen Maddock were generally resistant to developing their cars. Brabham pushed for further advances, and played a significant role in developing Cooper's highly successful 1960 T53 "lowline" car, with input from his friend Tauranac.[3] Brabham was confident he could do better than Cooper, and in late 1959 he asked Tauranac to come to the UK and work with him, initially producing upgrade kits for Sunbeam Rapier and Triumph Herald road cars at his car dealership, Jack Brabham Motors, but with the long-term aim of designing racing cars.[4]Brabham describes Tauranac as "absolutely the only bloke I'd have gone into partnership with".[5]

    To meet that aim, Brabham and Tauranac set up Motor Racing Developments Ltd. (MRD), deliberately avoiding the use of either man's name. The new company would compete with Cooper in the market for customer racing cars; as Brabham was still employed by Cooper, Tauranac produced the first MRD car, for the entry level Formula Junior class, in secrecy. Unveiled in the summer of 1961, the "MRD" was soon renamed. Motoring journalist Jabby Crombac pointed out that "[the] way a Frenchman pronounces those initials—written phonetically, 'em air day'—sounded perilously like the French word... merde."[6] The cars were subsequently known as Brabhams, with type numbers starting with BT for "Brabham Tauranac".[7]

    By the 1961 Formula One season, the Lotus and Ferrari teams had developed the mid-engined approach further than Cooper. Brabham had a poor season, scoring only four points, and—having run his own private Coopers in non-championship events during 1961—left the company in 1962 to drive for his own team: the Brabham Racing Organisation, using cars built by Motor Racing Developments.[8][9]

    Racing history—Formula One [edit]

    Jack Brabham and Ron Tauranac (1961–1970) [edit]

    The Brabham Racing Organisation entered the "works" cars until 1968

    Motor Racing Developments initially concentrated on making money by building cars for sale to customers in lower formulae, so the new car for the Formula One team was not ready until partway through the 1962 Formula One season. The Brabham Racing Organisation (BRO) started the year fielding customer Lotus chassis, in which Brabham took two points finishes, before the turquoise-liveried Brabham BT3 car made its debut at the 1962 German Grand Prix. It retired with a throttle problem after 9 of the 15 laps, but went on to take a pair of fourth places at the end of the season.[10]

    The Brabham BT3, the first Brabham Formula One design.

    From the 1963 season, Brabham was partnered by American driver Dan Gurney, the pair now running in Australia's racing colours of green and gold.[11] Jack Brabham took the team's first win at the non-championship Solitude Grand Prix in 1963.[12] Gurney took the marque's first two wins in the world championship, at the 1964 French and Mexican Grands Prix. Brabham works and customer cars took another three non-championship wins during the 1964 season.[13] The 1965 season was less successful, with no championship wins. Brabham finished third or fourth in the constructors' championship for three years running, but poor reliability marred promising performances on several occasions. Motor sport authors Mike Lawrence and David Hodges have said that a lack of resources may have cost the team results, a view echoed by Ron Tauranac.[14]

    The FIA doubled the Formula One engine capacity limit to 3 litres for the 1966 season and suitable engines were scarce. Brabham used engines from Australian engineering firm Repco, which had never produced a Formula One engine before, based on aluminium V8 engine blocks from the defunct American Oldsmobile F85 road car project, and other off the shelf parts.[15] Consulting and design engineer Phil Irving (of Vincent Motorcycle fame) was the project engineer responsible for producing the initial version of the engine. Few expected the Brabham-Repcos to be competitive,[16] but the light and reliable cars ran at the front from the start of the season. At the French Grand Prix at Reims-Gueux, Jack Brabham became the first man to win a Formula One world championship race in a car bearing his own name. Only his former team mateBruce McLaren, has since matched the achievement. It was the first in a run of four straight wins for the Australian veteran. Jack Brabham won his third title in 1966, becoming the only driver to win the Formula One World Championship in a car carrying his own name (cf SurteesHill and Fittipaldi Automotive). In 1967, the title went to Brabham's team mate, New Zealander Denny Hulme. Hulme had better reliability through the year, possibly due to Jack Brabham's desire to try new parts first.[17] The Brabham team took the constructors' world championship in both years.[18]

    For 1968 Austrian Jochen Rindt replaced Hulme, who had left to join McLaren. Repco produced a more powerful version of their V8 to maintain competitiveness against Ford's new Cosworth DFV, but it proved very unreliable. Slow communications between the UK and Australia had always made identifying and correcting problems very difficult. The car was fast—Rindt set pole position twice during the season—but Brabham and Rindt finished only three races between them, and ended the year with only ten points.[19]

    Brabham BT33. Technically conservative, Brabham did not produce a monocoque car until 1970.

    Although Brabham bought Cosworth DFV engines for the 1969 season, Rindt left to join Lotus. His replacement, Jacky Ickx, had a strong second half to the season, winning in Germany and Canada, after Jack Brabham was sidelined by a testing accident.[20] Ickx finished second in the drivers' championship, with 37 points to Jackie Stewart's 63. Brabham himself took a couple of pole positions and two top three finishes, but did not finish half the races. The team were second in the constructors' championship, aided by second places at Monaco and Watkins Glenscored by Piers Courage, driving a Brabham for the Frank Williams Racing Cars privateer squad.[21]

    Jack Brabham intended to retire at the end of the 1969 season and sold his share in the team to Tauranac. However, Rindt's late decision to remain with Lotus meant that Brabham drove for another year.[22] He took his last win in the opening race of the 1970 season and was competitive throughout the year, although mechanical failures blunted his challenge.[23] Aided by number two driver Rolf Stommelen, the team came fourth in the constructors' championship.

    Ron Tauranac (1971) [edit]

    Brabham BT34Graham Hill took his final Formula One win in the non-championship BRDC International Trophy at Silverstone.

    Tauranac signed double world champion Graham Hill and young Australian Tim Schenken to drive for the 1971 season. Tauranac designed the unusual 'lobster claw' BT34, featuring twin radiators mounted ahead of the front wheels, a single example of which was built for Hill. Although Hill, no longer a front-runner since his 1969 accident, took his final Formula One win in the non-championship BRDC International Trophy atSilverstone,[24] the team scored only seven championship points.

    Tauranac, an engineer at heart, started to feel his Formula One budget of around £100,000 was a gamble he could not afford to take on his own and began to look around for an experienced business partner.[25] He sold the company for £100,000 at the end of 1971 to British businessmanBernie Ecclestone, Jochen Rindt's former manager and erstwhile owner of the Connaught team. Tauranac stayed on to design the cars and run the factory.[26]

    Bernie Ecclestone (1972–1987) [edit]

    The Brabham BT44 on display in 2003. The car was used in the 1974 and 1975 seasons.

    Tauranac left Brabham early in the 1972 season after Ecclestone changed the way the company was organised without consulting him. Ecclestone has since said "In retrospect, the relationship was never going to work", noting that "[Tauranac and I] both take the view: 'Please be reasonable, do it my way'".[27] The highlights of an aimless year, during which the team ran three different models, were pole position for Argentinian driver Carlos Reutemann at his home race at Buenos Aires and a victory in the non-championship Interlagos Grand Prix. For the 1973 season, Ecclestone promoted the young South African engineer Gordon Murray to chief designer and moved Herbie Blash from the Formula Two programme to become the Formula One team manager. Both would remain with the team for the next 15 years. For 1973, Murray produced the triangular cross-section BT42, with which Reutemann scored two podium finishes and finished seventh in the drivers' championship.

    In the 1974 season, Reutemann took the first three victories of his Formula One career, and Brabham's first since 1970. The team finished a close fifth in the constructors' championship, fielding the much more competitive BT44s. After a strong finish to the 1974 season, many observers felt the team were favourites to win the 1975 title. The year started well, with a first win for Brazilian driver Carlos Pace at the Interlagoscircuit in his native São Paulo. However, as the season progressed, tyre wear frequently slowed the cars in races.[28] Pace took another two podiums and finished sixth in the championship; while Carlos Reutemann had five podium finishes, including a dominant win in the 1975 German Grand Prix, and finished third in the drivers' championship. The team likewise ranked third in the constructors' table at the end of the year.

    While rival teams Lotus and McLaren relied on the Cosworth DFV engine from the late 1960s to the early 1980s, Ecclestone sought a competitive advantage by investigating other options. Despite the success of Murray's Cosworth-powered cars, Ecclestone signed a deal with Italian motor manufacturer Alfa Romeo to use their large and powerful flat-12 engine from the 1976 season. The engines were free, but they rendered the new BT45s, now in red Martini Racing livery, unreliable and overweight.[29] The 1976 and 1977 seasons saw Brabham fall toward the back of the field again. Reutemann negotiated a release from his contract before the end of the 1976 season and signed with Ferrari. Ulsterman John Watson replaced him at Brabham for 1977. The team lost Carlos Pace early in the 1977 season when he died in a light aircraft accident.[30]

    For the 1978 season, Murray's BT46 featured several new technologies to overcome the weight and packaging difficulties caused by the Alfa engines. Ecclestone signed then two-time Formula One world champion Niki Lauda from Ferrari through a deal with Italian dairy products company Parmalat which met the cost of Lauda ending his Ferrari contract and made up his salary to the £200,000 Ferrari was offering. 1978 was the year of the dominant Lotus 79 "wing car", which used aerodynamic ground effect to stick to the track when cornering, but Lauda won two races in the BT46, one with the controversial "B" or "fan car" version.[31]

    The partnership with Alfa Romeo ended during the 1979 season, the team's first with young Brazilian driver Nelson Piquet. Murray designed the full-ground effect BT48 around a rapidly developed new Alfa Romeo V12 engine and incorporated an effective "carbon-carbon braking" system—a technology Brabham pioneered in 1976. However, unexpected movement of the car's aerodynamiccentre of pressure made its handling unpredictable and the new engine was unreliable. The team dropped to eighth in the constructors' table by the end of the season.[32] Alfa Romeo started testing their own Formula One car during the season, prompting Ecclestone to revert to Cosworth DFV engines, a move Murray described as being "like having a holiday".[33] The new, lighter, Cosworth-powered BT49 was introduced before the end of the year at the Canadian Grand Prix; where after practice Lauda announced his immediate retirement from driving, later saying that he "was no longer getting any pleasure from driving round and round in circles".[34]

    The Brabham BT49 competed over four seasons, winning one championship.

    The team used the BT49 over four seasons. In the 1980 season Piquet scored three wins and the team took 3rd in the constructors' championship with Piquet second in the Drivers Championship. This season saw the introduction of the blue and white livery that the cars would wear through several changes of sponsor, until the team's demise in 1992. With a better understanding of ground effect, the team further developed the BT49C for the 1981 season, incorporating a hydropneumatic suspension system to avoid ride height limitations intended to reduce downforce. Piquet, who had developed a close working relationship with Murray,[35] took the drivers' title with three wins, albeit amid accusations of cheating. The team finished second in the constructors championship, behind the Williams team.

    Renault had introduced turbocharged engines to Formula One in 1977. Brabham had tested a BMW 4-cylinder M12 turbocharged engine in the summer of 1981. For the 1982 season the team designed a new car, the BT50, around the BMW engine which, like the Repco engine 16 years previously, was based on a road car engine block, the BMW M10. Brabham continued to run the Cosworth-powered BT49D in the early part of the season while reliability and driveability issues with the BMW units were resolved. The relationship came close to ending, with the German manufacturer insisting that Brabham use their engine. The turbo car took its first win at the Canadian Grand Prix. In the constructors championship, the team finished fifth, the drivers Riccardo Patrese, who scored the last win of the Brabham-Ford combination in the Monaco Grand Prix, 10th and World Champion Piquet a mere 11th in the drivers championship. In the 1983 season, Piquet took the championship lead from Renault's Alain Prost at the last race of the year, the South African Grand Prix to become the first driver to win the Formula One drivers' world championship with a turbo-powered car. The team did not win the constructor's championship in either 1981 or 1983, despite Piquet's success. Riccardo Patrese was the only driver other than Piquet to win a race for Brabham in this period—the drivers in the second car contributed only a fraction of the team's points in each of these championship seasons. Patrese finished 9th in the drivers championship with 13 points, dropping the team behind Ferrari and Renault to third in the constructors championship.

    Nelson Piquet and his BT54 were hampered byPirelli tyres in 1985.

    Piquet took the team's last wins: two in 1984 with winning the 7th and 8th race of that season, the Canadian Grand Prix and the Detroit Grand Prix and one in 1985 with winning the French Grand Prix before reluctantly leaving for the Williams team at the end of the season. After seven years and two world championships, he felt he was worth more than Ecclestone's salary offer for 1986. Piquet finished 5th in 1984 and a mere 8th in 1985 in the respective drivers championships.[35] The 1986 season was a disaster. Murray's radical long and low BT55, with its BMW M12 engine tilted over to improve its aerodynamics and lower its centre of gravity, scored only two points. Driver Elio de Angelis became the Formula One team's only fatality when he died in a testing accident at the Paul Ricard circuit. Derek Warwick, who replaced de Angelis, was close to scoring two points for fifth in the British Grand Prix, but a problem on the last lap dropped him out of the points. In August, BMW after considering running their own in-house team, announced their departure from Formula One at the end of the season. Murray, who had largely taken over the running of the team as Ecclestone became more involved with his role at the Formula One Constructors Association, felt that "the way the team had operated for 15 years broke down". He left Brabham in November to join McLaren.[36]

    Ecclestone held BMW to their contract for the 1987 season, but the German company would only supply the laydown engine. The upright units, around which Brabham had designed their new car, were sold for use by the Arrows team. Senior figures at Brabham, including Murray, have admitted that by this stage Ecclestone had lost interest in running the team. 1987 was only slightly more successful than the previous year—Patrese and de Cesaris scoring 10 points between them, including two third places at the Belgian Grand Prix and the Mexican Grand Prix. Unable to locate a suitable engine supplier, the team missed the FIA deadline for entry into the 1988 world championship and Ecclestone finally announced the team's withdrawal from Formula One at the Brazilian Grand Prix in April 1988. He sold MRD to Alfa Romeo for an unknown price.[36]

    Joachim Luhti (1989) [edit]

    The Brabham team missed the 1988 season during the change of ownership. Alfa Romeo soon sold it on, this time to Swiss financier Joachim Luhti, who brought it back into Formula One for the 1989 season. The new BT58, powered by an engine from Judd (originally another of Jack Brabham's companies), was produced for the 1989 season.[37] Italian driver Stefano Modena drove alongside the more experienced Martin Brundle. The team finished in eighth place, and Modena took the team's last podium: a third place at the Monaco Grand Prix. The team also failed to make the grid sometimes: Brundle failed to prequalify at the Canadian Grand Prix and the French Grand Prix. The team finished 9th in the constructors' championship at the end of the season.

    Middlebridge Racing (1989–1992) [edit]

    After Luhti's arrest on tax fraud charges in mid-1989,[38] several parties disputed the ownership of the team. Middlebridge Group Limited, a Japanese engineering firm owned by billionaire Koji Nakauchi, was already involved with established Formula 3000 team Middlebridge Racing and gained control of Brabham for the 1990 season. Blash returned to run the team. Middlebridge paid for its purchase using £1 million loaned to them by finance company Landhurst Leasing,[39] but the team remained underfunded and would only score a few more points finishes in its last three seasons. Jack Brabham's youngest son, David, raced for the Formula One team for a short time in 1990, a disastrous year, with Modena's fifth place in the season opening United States Grand Prix being the only top six finish. The team finished ninth in the Constructors' Championship. Brundle and fellow Briton Mark Blundell, scored only three points during the 1991 season. Due to poor results in the first half of 1991, they had to prequalify in the second half of the season, Blundell failed to do so in Japan, as did Brundle in Australia. The team finished 10th in the Constructors Championship, behind another struggling British team, Lotus. In 1992, Damon Hill, the son of another former Brabham driver and World Champion, debuted in the team afterGiovanna Amati, the last woman to attempt to race in Formula One, was dropped when her sponsorship failed to materialise.

    Argentine Sergio Rinland designed the team's final cars around Judd engines, except for 1991 when Yamaha powered the cars. In the 1992 season the cars (which were updated versions of the 1991 car) rarely qualified for races. Hill gave the team its final finish, at the Hungarian Grand Prix, where he crossed the finish line 11th and last, four laps behind the winner, Ayrton Senna. After the end of that race the team ran out of funds and collapsed. Middlebridge Group Limited had been unable to continue making repayments against the £6 million ultimately provided by Landhurst Leasing, which went into administration. The Serious Fraud Office investigated the case. Landhurst's managing directors were found guilty of corruption and imprisoned, having accepted bribes for further loans to Middlebridge.[39] It was one of four teams to leave Formula One that year. (cf March EngineeringFondmetal and Andrea Moda Formula). Although there was talk of reviving the team for the following year, its assets passed to Landhurst Leasing and were auctioned by the company's receivers in 1993.[40] Among these was the team's old factory in Chessington, which was acquired by Yamaha Motor Sports and used to house Activa Technology Limited, a company manufacturing composite components for race and road cars run by Herbie Blash. The factory was bought by the Carlin DPR GP2 motor racing team in 2006.[41]

    Potential F1 revival (2010) [edit]

    On 4 June 2009, Franz Hilmer confirmed that he had used the name to lodge an entry for the 2010 Formula One season as a cost capped team under the new budget cap regulations.[42] The Brabham family was not involved and announced that it was seeking legal advice over the use of the name.[43] The team's entry was not accepted.

    The Brabham family contested the claim in court, and though the situation is not yet fully resolved, Jack Brabham's son David says "There is a possibility the Brabham team name could be heading back to Formula One". "Right now this is a very sensitive issue," he told Totalrace. "But, yes, there is the possibility to bring the team back (to F1)."

    Motor Racing Developments [edit]

    Several F1 teams used Brabhams (Piers CourageFWRC, 1969)

    The Repco Brabham logo from the 1960s, illustrating the joint branding of the period.

    Brabham cars were also widely used by other teams, and not just in Formula One. Jack Brabham and Ron Tauranac called the company they set up in 1961 to design and build formula racing cars to customer teams Motor Racing Developments (MRD), and this company had a large portfolio of other activities. Initially, Brabham and Tauranac each held 50 percent of the shares.[8] Tauranac was responsible for design and running the business, while Brabham was the test driver and arranged corporate deals like the Repco engine supply and the use of the MIRA wind tunnel. He also contributed ideas to the design process and often machined parts and helped build the cars.[44]

    From 1963 to 1965, MRD was not directly involved in Formula One, and often ran works cars in other formulae. A separate company, Jack Brabham's Brabham Racing Organisation, ran the Formula One works entry.[45] Like other customers, BRO bought its cars from MRD, initially at £3,000 per car,[46] although it did not pay for development parts. Tauranac was unhappy with his distance from the Formula One operation and before the 1966 season suggested that he was no longer interested in producing cars for Formula One under this arrangement. Brabham investigated other chassis suppliers for BRO, however the two reached an agreement and from 1966 MRD was much more closely involved in this category.[47] After Jack Brabham sold his shares in MRD to Ron Tauranac at the end of 1969, the works Formula One team was MRD.

    Despite only building its first car in 1961, by the mid-1960s MRD had overtaken established constructors like Cooper to become the largest manufacturer of single-seat racing cars in the world,[48] and by 1970 had built over 500 cars.[49] Of the other Formula One teams which used Brabhams, Frank Williams Racing Cars and the Rob Walker Racing Team were the most successful. The 1965 British Grand Prix saw seven Brabhams compete, only two of them from the works team, and there were usually four or five at championship Grands Prix throughout that season. The firm built scores of cars for the lower formulae each year, peaking with 89 cars in 1966.[49] Brabham had the reputation of providing customers with cars of a standard equal to those used by the works team, which worked "out of the box". The company provided a high degree of support to its customers—including Jack Brabham helping customers set up their cars. During this period the cars were usually known as "Repco Brabhams", not because of the Repco engines used in Formula One between 1966 and 1968, but because of a smaller-scale sponsorship deal through which the Australian company had been providing parts to Jack Brabham since his Cooper days.[50]

    The BT40 was the last Formula Twomodel from Brabham

    At the end of 1971 Bernie Ecclestone bought MRD. He retained the Brabham brand, as did subsequent owners. Although the production of customer cars continued briefly under Bernie Ecclestone's ownership, he believed the company needed to focus on Formula One to succeed. The last production customer Brabhams were the Formula Two BT40 and the Formula Three BT41 of 1973,[51] although Ecclestone sold ex-works Formula One BT44Bs to RAM Racing as late as 1976.[52]

    In 1988 Ecclestone sold Motor Racing Developments to Alfa Romeo. The Formula One team did not compete that year, but Alfa Romeo put the company to use designing and building a prototype "Procar"—a racing car with the silhouette of a large saloon (the Alfa Romeo 164) covering a composite racing car chassis and mid mounted race engine. This was intended for a racing series for major manufacturers to support Formula One Grands Prix, and was designated the Brabham BT57.[53]

    Racing history—other categories [edit]

    Brabham's last USAC race-winning car—the Brabham BT25 IndyCar of 1968.

    The Brabham BT18-Honda completely dominated Formula Two in 1966

    Top drivers used Brabham F3 cars in their early careers. (James Hunt, 1969)

    Indycar [edit]

    Brabham cars competed at the Indianapolis 500 from the mid-1960s to the early 1970s. After an abortive project in 1962,[54] MRD was commissioned in 1964 to build an Indycar chassis powered by an American Offenhauser engine. The resultant BT12 chassis was raced by Jack Brabham as the "Zink-Urschel Trackburner" at the 1964 event and retired with a fuel tank problem. The car was entered again in 1966, taking a third place for Jim McElreath. From 1968 to 1970, Brabham returned to Indianapolis, at first with a 4.2 litre version of the Repco V8 the team used in Formula One—with which Peter Revson finished fifth in 1969—before reverting to the Offenhauser engine for 1970.[55] The Brabham-Offenhauser combination was entered again in 1971 by J.C. Agajanian, finishing fifth in the hands of Bill Vukovich II.[56] Although a Brabham car never won at Indianapolis, McElreath won four United States Automobile Club (USAC) races over 1965 and 1966 in the BT12. The "Dean Van Lines Special" in which Mario Andretti won the 1965 USAC national championship was a direct copy of this car, made with permission from Brabham by Andretti's crew chief Clint Brawner.[57]Revson took Brabham's final USAC race win in a BT25 in 1969, using the Repco engine.[58]

    Formula Two [edit]

    In the 1960s and early 1970s, drivers who had reached Formula One often continued to compete in Formula Two. In 1966 MRD produced the BT18 for the lower category, with a Honda engine acting as a stressed component. The car was extremely successful, winning 11 consecutive Formula Two races in the hands of the Formula One pairing of Brabham and Hulme. Cars were entered by MRD and not by the Brabham Racing Organisation, avoiding a direct conflict with Repco, their Formula One engine supplier.[59]

    Formula Three [edit]

    The first Formula Three Brabham, the BT9, won only four major races in 1964. The BT15 which followed in 1965 was a highly successful design. 58 cars were sold, which won 42 major races. Further developments of the same concept, including wings by the end of the decade, were highly competitive up until 1971. The BT38C of 1972 was Brabham's first production monocoque and the first not designed by Tauranac. Although 40 were ordered, it was less successful than its predecessors. The angular BT41 was the final Formula Three Brabham.[60]

    Sports cars [edit]

    Tauranac did not enjoy designing sports cars and could only spare a small amount of his time from MRD's very successful single-seater business. Only 14 sports car models were built between 1961 and 1972, out of a total production of almost 600 chassis.[61] The BT8A was the only one built in any numbers, and was quite successful in national level racing in the UK in 1964 and 1965.[62] The design was "stretched" in 1966 to become the one-off BT17, originally fitted with the 4.3 litre version of the Repco engine for Can-Am racing. It was quickly abandoned by MRD after engine reliability problems became evident.[63]

    Technical innovation [edit]

    The Brabham BT45 driven by José Carlos Pace.

    The 1978 BT46B "Fan car" won its only race before being banned.

    Brabham was considered a technically conservative team in the 1960s, chiefly because it persevered with traditional "spaceframe" cars long after Lotus introduced lighter, stiffer "monocoque" chassis to Formula One in 1962. Chief designer Tauranac reasoned that monocoques of the time were not usefully stiffer than well designed spaceframe chassis, and were harder to repair and less suitable for MRD's customers.[64] His "old fashioned" cars won the Brabham team the 1966 and 1967 championships, and were competitive in Formula One until rule changes forced a move to monocoques in 1970.[65]

    Despite the perceived conservatism, in 1963 Brabham was the first Formula One team to use a wind tunnel to hone their designs to reduce dragand stop the cars lifting off the ground at speed.[66] The practice only became the norm in the early 1980s, and is possibly the most important factor in the design of modern cars. Towards the end of the 1960s, teams began to exploit aerodynamic downforce to push the cars' tyres down harder on the track and enable them to maintain faster speeds through high-speed corners. At the 1968 Belgian Grand Prix, Brabham were the first, alongside Ferrari, to introduce full width rear wings to this effect.[67]

    The team's most fertile period of technical innovation came in the 1970s and 1980s when Gordon Murray became technical director. During 1976, the team introduced "carbon-carbon brakes" to Formula One, which promised reduced "unsprung weight" and better stopping performance due to carbon's greater coefficient of friction. The initial versions used carbon-carbon composite brake pads and a steel disc faced with carbon "pucks". The technology was not reliable at first; in 1976, Carlos Pace crashed at 180 mph (290 km/h) at the Österreichring circuit after heat build-up in the brakes boiled the brake fluid, leaving him with no way of stopping the car.[68] By 1979, Brabham had developed an effective carbon-carbon braking system, combining structural carbon discs with carbon brake pads.[69] By the late 1980s, carbon brakes were used by all competitors in almost all top level motor sports.

    Although Brabham experimented with airdams and underbody skirts in the mid-1970s, the team, like the rest of the field, did not immediately understand Lotus's development of a ground effect car in 1977. The Brabham BT46B "Fan car" of 1978, generated enormous downforce with a fan, which sucked air from beneath the car, although its claimed use was for engine cooling. The car only raced once in the Formula One World Championship—Niki Lauda winning the 1978 Swedish Grand Prix—before a loophole in the regulations was closed by the FIA.[70]

    Although in 1979 Murray was the first to use lightweight "carbon fibre composite" panels to stiffen Brabham's aluminium alloy monocoques, he echoed his predecessor Tauranac in being the last to switch to the new fully composite monocoques. Murray was reluctant to build the entire chassis from composite materials until he understood their behaviour in a crash, an understanding achieved in part through an instrumentedcrash test of a BT49 chassis.[69] The team did not follow McLaren's 1981 MP4/1 with their own fully composite chassis until the "lowline" BT55 in 1986,[71] the last team to do so. This technology is now used in all top level single seater racing cars.

    For the 1981 season the FIA introduced a 6 cm (2.4 in) minimum ride height for the cars, intended to slow them in corners by limiting the downforce created by aerodynamic ground effect. Gordon Murray devised a "hydropneumatic suspension" system for the BT49C, which allowed the car to settle to a much lower ride height at speed. Brabham were accused of cheating by other teams, although Murray believes that the system met the letter of the regulations. No action was taken against the team and others soon produced systems with similar effects.[72]

    At the 1982 British Grand Prix, Brabham reintroduced the idea of re-fuelling and changing the car's tyres during the race, unseen since the 1957 Formula One season, to allow their drivers to sprint away at the start of races on a light fuel load and soft tyres. After studying techniques used at the Indianapolis 500 and in NASCAR racing in the United States, the team were able to refuel and re-tyre the car in 14 seconds in tests ahead of the race. In 1982 Murray felt the tactic did little more than "get our sponsors noticed at races we had no chance of winning", but in 1983 the team made good use of the tactic.[73] Refuelling was banned for 1984, and did not reappear until the 1994 season (until it was banned again in 2010 as a part of cost cutting measures), but tyre changes have remained part of Formula One.[74]

    Controversy [edit]

    The fan car and hydropneumatic suspension exploited loopholes in the sporting regulations. In the early 1980s, Brabham was accused of going further and breaking the regulations. During 1981, Piquet's first championship year, rumours circulated of illegal underweight Brabham chassis. Driver Jacques Laffite was among those to claim that the cars were fitted with heavily ballastedbodywork before being weighed at scrutineering. The accusation was denied by Brabham's management. No formal protest was made against the team and no action was taken against them by the sporting authorities.[75]

    From 1978, Ecclestone was president of the Formula One Constructors Association (FOCA), a body formed by the teams to represent their interests. This left his team open to accusations of having advance warning of rule changes. Ecclestone denies that the team benefited from this and Murray has noted that, contrary to this view, at the end of 1982 the team had to abandon their new BT51 car, built on the basis that ground effect would be permitted in 1983. Brabham had to design and build a replacement, the BT52, in only three months.[76] At the end of the 1983 season, Renault and Ferrari, both beaten to the drivers' championship by Piquet, protested that the Research Octane Number (RON) of the team's fuel was above the legal limit of 102. The FIA declared that a figure of up to 102.9 was permitted under the rules, and that Brabham had not exceeded this limit.[77]

    Championship results [edit]

    Results achieved by the "works" Brabham team. Bold results indicate a championship win.

    Season Entrant Car Tyres Engine Drivers Constructors Championship
    1962 Brabham Racing Organisation Lotus 24
    Brabham BT3
    D Coventry-Climax Jack Brabham 7th (9 points)
    1963 Brabham Racing Organisation Brabham BT3
    Brabham BT7
    Lotus 25
    D Coventry-Climax Jack Brabham
    Dan Gurney
    3rd (28 points)
    1964 Brabham Racing Organisation Brabham BT7
    Brabham BT11
    D Coventry-Climax Jack Brabham
    Dan Gurney
    4th (33 points)
    1965 Brabham Racing Organisation Brabham BT7
    Brabham BT11
    D
    G
    Coventry-Climax Jack Brabham
    Dan Gurney
    Denny Hulme
    Giancarlo Baghetti
    3rd (27 pts)
    1966 Brabham Racing Organisation Brabham BT19
    Brabham BT20
    Brabham BT22
    G Repco Jack Brabham
    Denny Hulme
    Champion (42 pts)
    1967 Brabham Racing Organisation Brabham BT19
    Brabham BT20
    Brabham BT24
    G Repco Jack Brabham
    Denny Hulme
    Champion (37 pts)
    1968 Brabham Racing Organisation Brabham BT24
    Brabham BT26
    G Repco Jack Brabham
    Jochen Rindt
    Dan Gurney
    8th (10 pts)
    1969 Motor Racing Developments Brabham BT26/A G Cosworth DFV Jack Brabham
    Jacky Ickx
    2nd (51 pts)
    1970 Motor Racing Developments Brabham BT33 G Cosworth DFV Jack Brabham
    Rolf Stommelen
    4th (35 pts)
    1971 Motor Racing Developments Brabham BT33
    Brabham BT34
    G Cosworth DFV Graham Hill
    Tim Schenken
    Dave Charlton
    9th (5 pts)
    1972 Motor Racing Developments Brabham BT33
    Brabham BT34
    Brabham BT37
    G Cosworth DFV Graham Hill
    Carlos Reutemann
    Wilson Fittipaldi
    9th (7 pts)
    1973 Motor Racing Developments
    Ceramica Pagnossin Team MRD
    Brabham BT37
    Brabham BT42
    G Cosworth DFV Carlos Reutemann
    Wilson Fittipaldi
    Andrea de Adamich
    Rolf Stommelen
    John Watson
    4th (49 pts)
    1974 Motor Racing Developments Brabham BT42
    Brabham BT44
    G Cosworth DFV Carlos Reutemann
    Carlos Pace
    Rikky von Opel
    Richard Robarts
    Teddy Pilette
    5th (35 pts)
    1975 Martini Racing Brabham BT44B G Cosworth DFV Carlos Reutemann
    Carlos Pace
    2nd (54 pts)
    1976 Martini Racing Brabham BT45 G Alfa Romeo Carlos Reutemann
    Carlos Pace
    Rolf Stommelen
    Larry Perkins
    9th (9 pts)
    1977 Martini Racing Brabham BT45/B G Alfa Romeo Carlos Pace
    John Watson
    Hans-Joachim Stuck
    Giorgio Francia
    5th (27 pts)
    1978 Parmalat Racing Team Brabham BT45C
    Brabham BT46/B/C
    G Alfa Romeo Niki Lauda
    John Watson
    Nelson Piquet
    3rd (53 pts)
    1979 Parmalat Racing Team Brabham BT46
    Brabham BT48
    Brabham BT49
    G Alfa Romeo
    Cosworth DFV
    Niki Lauda
    Nelson Piquet
    Ricardo Zunino
    8th (6 pts)
    1980 Parmalat Racing Team Brabham BT49/B M Cosworth DFV Nelson Piquet
    Ricardo Zunino
    Héctor Rebaque
    3rd (55 pts)
    1981 Parmalat Racing Team Brabham BT49/B/C M
    G
    Cosworth DFV Nelson Piquet
    Héctor Rebaque
    Ricardo Zunino
    2nd (61 pts)
    1982 Parmalat Racing Team Brabham BT49D
    Brabham BT50
    G Cosworth DFV
    BMW M12/13
    Nelson Piquet
    Riccardo Patrese
    5th (41 pts)
    1983 Fila Sport Brabham BT52/B M BMW M12/13 Nelson Piquet
    Riccardo Patrese
    3rd (72 pts)
    1984 MRD International Brabham BT53 M BMW M12/13 Nelson Piquet
    Teo Fabi
    Corrado Fabi
    Manfred Winkelhock
    4th (38 pts)
    1985 Motor Racing Developments Ltd Brabham BT54 P BMW M12/13 Nelson Piquet
    Marc Surer
    François Hesnault
    5th (26 pts)
    1986 Motor Racing Developments Ltd Brabham BT54
    Brabham BT55
    P BMW M12/13/1 Elio de Angelis
    Riccardo Patrese
    Derek Warwick
    9th (2 pts)
    1987 Motor Racing Developments Ltd Brabham BT56 G BMW M12/13/1 Riccardo Patrese
    Andrea de Cesaris
    Stefano Modena
    8th (10 pts)
    1989 Motor Racing Developments Brabham BT58 P Judd Martin Brundle
    Stefano Modena
    9th (8 pts)
    1990 Motor Racing Developments Brabham BT58
    Brabham BT59
    P Judd Stefano Modena
    David Brabham
    Gregor Foitek
    10th (2 pts)
    1991 Motor Racing Developments Ltd Brabham BT59Y
    Brabham BT60Y
    P Yamaha Martin Brundle
    Mark Blundell
    9th (3 pts)
    1992 Motor Racing Developments Ltd Brabham BT60B G Judd Eric van de Poele
    Giovanna Amati
    Damon Hill
    NC (0 pts)

    Notes [edit]

    1. ^ "FIA" has been used throughout this article to refer to the motor sports governing body. Until 1978 motor sport was governed directly by the Commission Sportive Internationale (CSI) and from 1978 by the Fédération Internationale du Sport Automobile (FISA), both subsidiary bodies of the FIA. In 1992 the FIA subsumed FISA and its governing role.
    2. ^ Henry (1985) pp. 17–19
    3. ^ Lawrence (1999) pp. 18, 22. Brabham had consulted Tauranac by letter on technical matters since arriving in the UK. He used a gear cluster designed by Tauranac for several years and Tauranac also advised on the suspension geometry of the Cooper T53 "lowline" car.
    4. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 22–4. Jack had already tried to buy Cooper in association with fellow-driver Roy Salvadori
    5. ^ Brabham, Nye (2004) p. 140
    6. ^ Scarlett (May 2006) p. 43. Although compare pronunciation with the related verb emmerder. This is the story as recalled by both Ron Tauranac and Brabham mechanic Michael Scarlett. The British journalist Alan Brinton has also been credited with pointing out this unfortunate fact to Brabham. See Drackett (1985) p. 21.
    7. ^ Drackett (1985) p. 21. The first prototype FJunior car therefore became the BT1 and its production version the BT2.
    8. a b Lawrence (1999) p. 31
    9. ^ Brabham, Nye (2004) pp. 14, 145–9. Brabham's and Tauranac's (Lawrence 1999 p. 32) accounts differ on whether the BRO was formed for the purpose of F1, or was already in existence.
    10. ^ Henry (1985) pp. 21–22. Brabham bought a new spaceframe Lotus 24, but had to use a 1961-vintage Lotus 21 in the early races after a workshop fire. Team Lotus reserved the monocoque Lotus 25 for their own use that season.
    11. ^ Brabham, Nye (2004) p. 147
    12. ^ Henry (1985) p. 28
    13. ^ Henry (1985) pp. 35–41
    14. ^ Tauranac says (Lawrence (1999) p. 48) that he feels a third mechanic would have reduced the reliability problems. Lawrence himself notes (Lawrence (1999) p. 71) that "If only Jack had been prepared to spend a little more money, the results could have been so much better." Hodges (1990) p. 32 notes "Economy was a watchword. (...) It was this attitude, perhaps, which cost [Brabham] some races."
    15. ^ Lawrence (1999) pp. 51–52
    16. ^ Unique p. 43. The team was the only one not contracted by John Frankenheimer for the shooting of the film Grand Prix at world championship races that year.
    17. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 92. Hulme, Tauranac and Frank Hallam, Repco-Brabham's chief engineer, all shared this view.
    18. ^ Fearnley (May 2006) pp. 34–40
    19. ^ Fearnley (May 2006) p. 41
    20. ^ Henry p. 85
    21. ^ Henry (1985) pp. 79–80
    22. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 109 & Brabham, Nye (2004) pp. 230–231. He was therefore technically a team employee in his final season.
    23. ^ Henry (1985) p. 93
    24. ^ Henry (1985) pp. 114–17
    25. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 113
    26. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 116
    27. ^ Lawrence. pp. 116–118
    28. ^ Gill (ed.) (1976) p. 103
    29. ^ Henry (1985) pp. 159–161
    30. ^ Henry (1985) pp. 164, 167
    31. ^ Details of BT46 and 1978 season: Henry (1985) p. 171, pp. 179–189
      • Lauda's move and salary: Lovell (2004) p. 98
    32. ^ Henry (1985) p. 191
    33. ^ Henry (1985) pp. 213, 215
    34. ^ Henry (1985) p. 216
    35. a b Roebuck (1986) p. 114
    36. a b Lovell (2004) pp. 161–164
    37. ^ Brabham, Nye (2004) p. 254. Engine Developments, the company which builds Judd engines, was a company Jack Brabham set up in partnership with John Judd after his retirement from driving in 1970. Judd had previously worked for Brabham on the Repco project.
    38. ^ Slevin, Gary (2008) The Decline of Brabham. Formula One Rejects. Retrieved 10 June 2009
    39. a b John Willcock (18 October 1997). "Formula One obsession led to pounds 50m Landhurst fraud"The Independent (London). Retrieved 26 April 2011.
    40. ^ Baker (10 October 1993)
    41. ^ Glenn Freeman (27 November 2006). "Carlin to enter GP2 in 2007"Autosport.com. Retrieved 8 December 2006.
    42. ^ Jonathan Noble (4 June 2009). "Brabham name owner submits F1 entry"Autosport.com. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
    43. ^ Edd Straw (4 June 2009). "Brabham family seeking legal advice"Autosport.com. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
    44. ^ Tauranac referred to this as Brabham's trade; they had first met at the small machine shopBrabham ran in Sydney in the early 1950s.
    45. ^ To confuse the relationship between the two companies further, MRD was renamed Brabham Racing Developments between 1962 and 1964. Henry (1985) p. 24
    46. ^ Fearnley (May 2006) p. 39
    47. ^ Lawrence (1999) pp. 74–75
    48. ^ Unique p. 111
    49. a b Lawrence (1999) p. 207
    50. ^ Henry (1985) p. 53
    51. ^ Hodges (1990) p. 39
    52. ^ Henry (1985) p. 156. Henry claims Ecclestone did this to ensure the team would focus on its troublesome new Alfa Romeo powered BT45s.
    53. ^ "People: Allen McDonald"grandprix.com. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
    54. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 30
    55. ^ Brabham, Nye (2004) p. 240
    56. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 114
    57. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 57. Brawner repaired BT12 after a crash in 1964. As part of the deal he was allowed to make a copy of the then still unusual mid-engined design.
    58. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 99
    59. ^ Unique p. 117
    60. ^ Hodges (1998) pp. 34–39
    61. ^ Lawrence (1999) pp. 205–207
    62. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 55
    63. ^ Lawrence (1999) pp. 84–85
    64. ^ Lawrence (1999) pp. 44–45
    65. ^ Nye (1986) p. 60. Brabham's BT26As and Matra's experimental four wheel drive MS84 of 1969 were the last cars with spaceframe chassis cars in F1. For 1970 the FIA mandated the use of "bag tanks" for fuel, which were to be carried inside box structures. This effectively forced the team to design a monocoque structure. From 1968 Brabham's Indycars were monocoques for the same reason.
    66. ^ Henry (1985) p. 39. The initial tests were carried out at the Motor Industry Research Association wind tunnel under the auspices of Malcolm Sayer, who had been responsible for the aerodynamics of the Jaguar D-type Le Mans winning car.
    67. ^ Lawrence (1999) p. 100
    68. ^ Henry (1985) p. 163
    69. a b Howard (June 2006) p. 52. Interview with Gordon Murray and John Barnard on the early uses of Carbon Fibre in Formula One for brakes and chassis structure.
    70. ^ Henry (1985) p. 186–187. It is often claimed that the car was never banned, but rather withdrawn by Ecclestone. Ecclestone did agree to withdraw it after three races, but the FIA changed the regulations to render "fan cars" in general, not the BT46B in particular, illegal before it could race again.
    71. ^ Hodges (1998) p. 43
    72. ^ Henry (1985) pp. 223–225
    73. ^ Hamilton (ed.) (1983) pp. 63–72 Pitstops: A split-second spectacle feature by Denis Jenkinson.
    74. ^ Hamilton, Maurice (3 May 2009). "Ayrton Senna would applaud formula one's 2010 rebirth"The Guardian (London: Guardian News and Media Ltd). Retrieved 1 May 2011.
    75. ^ Henry (1985) p. 225
    76. ^ Henry (1985) p. 255
    77. ^ Drackett (1985) p. 133. Although "protested", as used by Drackett, implies a formal protest, he does not specify this, and Henry (1985) p. 267 says "no action was ever taken".

    References [edit]

    Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Brabham Racing Organisation
    Books
    • Bamsey, Ian; Benzing, Enrico; Staniforth, Allan; Lawrence, Mike (1988). The 1000 BHP Grand Prix cars. G T Foulis & Co Ltd. ISBN 0-85429-617-4.
    • Brabham, Jack; Nye, Doug (2004), The Jack Brabham Story, Motorbooks International, ISBN 0-7603-1590-6.
    • Collings, Timothy (2004). The Piranha Club. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-7535-0965-2.
    • Drackett, Phil (1985). Brabham—Story of a racing team. Arthur Baker Ltd. ISBN 0-213-16915-0.
    • Gill, Barrie (ed.) (1976). The World Championship 1975 – John Player Motorsport yearbook 1976. Queen Anne Press Ltd. ISBN 0-362-00254-1.
    • Hamilton, Maurice (ed.) (1983). Autocourse 1983–1984. Hazleton Publishing. ISBN 0-905138-25-2.
    • Henry, Alan (1985). Brabham, the Grand Prix Cars. Osprey. ISBN 0-905138-36-8.
    • Hodges, David (1998). A-Z of Formula Racing Cars 1945–1990. Bay View books. ISBN 1-901432-17-3.
    • Lawrence, Mike (1999). Brabham+Ralt+Honda: The Ron Tauranac story. Motor Racing Publications. ISBN 1-899870-35-0.
    • Lovell, Terry (2004). Bernie's Game. Metro Books. ISBN 1-84358-086-1.
    • Nye, Doug (1986). Autocourse history of the Grand Prix car 1966–85. Hazleton publishing. ISBN 0-905138-37-6.
    • Roebuck, Nigel (1986). Grand Prix Greats. Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN 0-85059-792-7.
    • Tremayne, David; Hughes, Mark (1998, 2001). The Concise Encyclopedia of Formula One. ParragonISBN 0-7525-6735-7.
    • Unique, (Various). Brabham – the man and the machines. Unique Motor Books. ISBN 1-84155-619-X.
    Newspapers and Magazines
    • Baker, Andrew (10 October 1993). "Sport Almanack: Racing cars for sale: one careful owner". The Independent (UK).
    • Fearnley, Paul (May 2006). "The powerhouse that Jack built". Motorsport. p. 41.
    • Howard, Keith (June 2006). "Carbon fibre". Motorsport. p. 52.
    • Murray, Alasdair (11 November 1987). "Tycoon's drive and a formula worth millions". The Times (UK). p. 4.
    • Scarlett, Michael (May 2006). "Team Building". Motorsport. p. 43.
    Websites

    All race and championship results are taken from the Official Formula 1 Website. 1962 Season review. www.formula1.com. Retrieved 27 April 2006

    External links [edit]

    • www.forix.com Biography of Jack Brabham, with significant content on the early years of the Brabham team.
    • www.nvo.com Picture gallery of historic Brabhams.
    • www.motorracing-archive.com Summary history of Brabham 1961–1972, including significant race results and production numbers for all models. (Archived here).
    • www.oldracingcars.com Complete race history of all Brabham F1 models from 1966 to 1982 and links to Brabham research projects on other models.
    • www.f3history.co.uk History of Formula Three, including Brabham (under 'Manufacturers'). (Archived here)
    • www.autocoursegpa.com Complete world championship Brabham team statistics
    Sporting positions
    Preceded by
    Lotus
    Formula One Constructors' Champion
    19661967
    Succeeded by
    Lotus
    [show]
    United Kingdom Motor Racing Developments
    [hide]
     
     
    [hide] 
    Current constructors (2013)
     
     
     
    [show] 
    Former constructors
    [show]

     

     

  • Paddock Postcard from Monte Carlo26 May 2013

     

    Paddock Postcard from Monte Carlo26 May 2013

    Felipe Massa (BRA) Ferrari at the Nazionale Piloti Football Match. Formula One World Championship, Rd6, Monaco Grand Prix, Preparations, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, Tuesday, 21 May 2013Force India team principal Vijay Mallya (left), his girlfriend and mother are joined by HSH Prince Albert of Monaco (right) and his wife Charlene, Princess of Monaco at Mallya's Monte Carlo yacht party, Monaco, May 23, 2013(L to R): Sonia Irvine (GBR), Jessica Michibata (JPN), girlfriend of Jenson Button (GBR) McLaren, and Catherine Hyde (GBR), girlfriend of Heikki Kovalainen (FIN) Caterham reserve driver, at the Amber Lounge Fashion Show. Formula One World Championship, Rd6, Monaco Grand Prix, Friday, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, 24 May 2013The helmet of Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1. Formula One World Championship, Rd6, Monaco Grand Prix, Practice, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, Thursday, 23 May 2013The Francois Cevert (FRA) tribute helmet livery worn by Jean-Eric Vergne (FRA) Scuderia Toro Rosso. Formula One World Championship, Rd6, Monaco Grand Prix, Practice, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, Thursday, 23 May 2013(L to R): Cameron Diaz (USA) Hollywood Actress and Leonardo di Caprio (USA) Hollywood Actor at a TAG Heuer 50 Years of the TAG Heuer Carrera celebration aboard the Super Yacht Delma. Formula One World Championship, Rd6, Monaco Grand Prix, Qualifying Day,Dougie Lampkin (GBR) Trials Bike Rider jumps over Johnny Herbert (GBR) Sky TV and Simon Lazenby (GBR) Sky TV. Formula One World Championship, Rd6, Monaco Grand Prix, Qualifying Day, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, Saturday, 25 May 2013Podium (L to R): Second placed Adrian Quaife-Hobbs (GBR) MP Motorsport, race winner Stefano Coletti (MON) RAPAX Team and third placed Mitch Evans (NZL) Arden. GP2 Series, Rd4, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, 23-26 May 2013.

    Motorsport obviously owns the limelight this weekend in Monaco, but proceedings traditionally open with a charity football match on Tuesday night. This year the annual game - the 20th to be held - raised money for the Princess Charlene Foundation in the Stade Louis II. Ferrari team mates Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa and McLaren’s Sergio Perez were amongst the Formula One stars in action on the pitch but their team was eventually defeated 3-2 by Star Team Monaco, which featured tennis player Novak Djokovic.

    Another tradition was fulfilled on Thursday night when Force India’s Vijay Mallya hosted a party on his megayacht, the Indian Empress. The 2013 theme was the Mogul splendour of old Rajasthan. English music legend Sir Cliff Richard, Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson, Formula One group CEO Bernie Ecclestone, McLaren’s Martin Whitmarsh, Force India drivers Paul di Resta and Adrian Sutil, former world champion Jacques Villeneuve, and HSH the Prince and Princess of Monaco - Albert and Charlene - were amongst the famous faces in attendance.

    Friday evening saw the return of the Amber Lounge charity Fashion Show, which raised funds for the Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund. McLaren’s Jenson Button, Caterham’s Charles Pic, Sauber’s Esteban Gutierrez and Force India’s Adrian Sutil were among the Formula One drivers taking to the catwalk for the night. Guests enjoying the show included former F1 driver Eddie Irvine, actor Liam Cunnigham, Tamara Ecclestone and model Rachel Hunter.

    Back to cockpit and many drivers have opted to use specially-designed helmets this weekend. Merecdes’ Lewis Hamilton has updated his yellow colour scheme with new graphics featuring girlfriend Nicole Scherzinger and dog Roscoe, Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso - two-time winner here in Monaco - has adorned his helmet with gold and Toro Rosso’s Jean-Eric Vergne has paid tribute to French racing legend Francois Cevert on the 40th anniversary of his death. 

    “I didn’t want to do the usual, glitzy, shiny Monaco helmet and this seemed like a nicer idea,” said the Frenchman. “For me, Cevert represented ‘La Belle Epoque’ of Formula One.”

    Also sporting a new lid this weekend are Lotus’s Kimi Raikkonen, whose new-look helmet has a James-Hunt inspired red design, and Force India’s Adrian Sutil, whose helmet now features a Uruguayan flag in honour of his father. The change to the German’s helmet isn’t Monaco specific, however, but will be included on the design for the rest of his career.

    As ever, the Monte Carlo paddock was teeming with the rich and famous. From the movie world came Cameron Diaz, Leonardo di Caprio, Michael Douglas, Rush director Ron Howard and George Lucas. From the motorsport world came FIA President Jean Todt, drivers Alain Prost, Keke Rosberg, Jacques Laffite, Jean Alesi, Kamui Kobayashi, NBC’s David Hobbs (whose last visit was back in 1963 as team mate to Formula Junior race winner Richard Attwood), Gerhard Berger, Francois Mazet, Patrick Tambay, Maria Teresa di Filipis, Howden Ganley, Tim Schenken, Giacomo Agostini, Andrea de Cesaris, Jean-Louis Schlesser, Bradley Smith, and VW WRC contender Sebastien Ogier.

    Other renowned racing faces included former Williams’ technical director Patrick Head and his wife Monica, former BRM team manager Tim Parnell, former McLaren stalwart Jo Ramirez, VW motorsport boss Jost Capito, former IOC and FOM consultant Michael Payne, artist extraordinaire Michael Turner, former Renault engine guru Bernard Dudot, and current Renault bosses Carlos Ghosn and Carlos Tavares. Tony Fernandes and Riad Asmat also made welcome appearances at Caterham. Former Marlboro sponsorship guru John Hogan celebrated his 70th birthday.

    Down at the ever-effervescent Red Bull Energy Station there was action aplenty. Freerunner Ryan Doyle, twice a winner of the Red Bull Art of Motion freerunning competition, entertained guests on Saturday afternoon with antics which included leaping off a balcony, sliding down a speaker towerand vaulting the swimming pool. He was joined in his stunts by Flatland BMX triple world champion Matthias Dandois and trials champion Dougie Lampkin. 

    On track, the GP2 races were a dream for local boy and series leader Stefano Coletti, who was sixth for Rapax in the first and won the second. Mitch Evans also had a good weekend for Arden International with third behind winner Sam Bird of Russian Time and Trident’s Kevin Ceccon in race one and third again behind Coletti and MP Motorsport’s Adrian Quaife-Hobbs in race two on Saturday afternoon.

    Carlin’s Felipe Nasr was fourth in both, while ART’s James Calado took a brace of fifths. It wasn’t such a great weekend for Arden’s Johnny Cecotto Jnr, who triggered a race-stopping multi-car shunt at Ste Devote in race one, and was subsequently banned from race two. 

    For more pictures, check out our Paddock Postcard gallery.

    For tickets and travel to 2013 FORMULA 1 races, click here.
    For FORMULA 1 and F1 team merchandise, click here.

  • Ferrari confirm suspension failure caused Massa crash

    Felipe Massa (BRA) Ferrari F138 crashes out of the race. Formula One World Championship, Rd6, Monaco Grand Prix, Race Day, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, Sunday, 26 May 2013Lap 30 and Ferrari's Felipe Massa suffers a near identical crash to the one he suffered in Practice 3, slamming into the barriers at Ste Devote and bringing out the safety carThe damaged car of Felipe Massa (BRA) Ferrari F138 who crashed in the race. Formula One World Championship, Rd6, Monaco Grand Prix, Race Day, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, Sunday, 26 May 2013Stefano Domenicali (ITA) Ferrari General Director. Formula One World Championship, Rd5, Spanish Grand Prix, Qualifying, Barcelona, Spain, Saturday, 11 May 2013Felipe Massa (BRA) Ferrari. Formula One World Championship, Rd6, Monaco Grand Prix, Practice, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, Thursday, 23 May 2013

     

     

    Ferrari confirmed on Tuesday that the violent crash suffered by Felipe Massa on lap 29 of Sunday’s race in Monaco was caused by suspension failure.

    Massa lost control of his car heading towards Ste Devote before colliding heavily with the barriers. The Brazilian made a precautionary visit to the medical centre following the accident but was subsequently released. 

    Having carried out an initial investigation into the cause of the crash based on telemetry data, the team studied components from Massa’s car back at their Maranello base on Monday before reaching their conclusion.

    “The findings validated the first impressions of the engineers, confirming that the accident was caused by an element of the front left suspension breaking,” said a statement on the Scuderia’s official website.

    Massa’s crash contributed to a disappointing weekend for Ferrari in which they were unable to rekindle the form that saw them score a double podium finish at the previous race in Spain. 

    Not only did Massa suffer two big accidents - the first of which, in FP3, prevented him from taking part in qualifying - but Fernando Alonso, a two-time winner in the Principality, could only manage seventh place on Sunday.

    “This championship seems to be a real rollercoaster of emotions,” commented Ferrari team principal Stefano Domenicali. “Following on from a good weekend comes a bad one. That was the case in the first four races outside Europe and nothing has changed now we are back on the Old Continent. 

    “I can confirm that we didn’t get carried away when we won, nor did we beat ourselves up when things did not go as well as expected. But from now on, it will be important to establish a consistent level of performance.

    “The best news to come out of the Monaco weekend is that Felipe is fine. Two big accidents, just over twenty-four hours apart and all he has to show for it is a bit of muscle pain. Fortunately there were no other injuries.”

    • © 2003-2013 Formula One World Championship Limited. All Rights Reserved

    Ferrari will spend the rest of the week working on their cars before they are flown to Montreal over the weekend in preparation for the Formula 1 Grand Prix du Canada 2013, running from June 7-9 at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve.

    For tickets and travel to 2013 FORMULA 1 races, click here.
    For FORMULA 1 and F1 team merchandise, click here.

     

     

  • American politics How to save Obama’s second term

    May 25, 2013

    PRESIDENTS often have no choice but to react to events. When a giant tornado struck a suburb of Oklahoma City on May 20th, Barack Obama declared a disaster and ordered the federal authorities to help search for survivors. As emergency workers pulled children from the rubble, the mudslinging in Washington, DC, paused. But only for a moment. Mr Obama is still beset by scandals. Republicans berate his administration for a “cover-up” after terrorists murdered diplomats in Benghazi; for snooping on journalists; and for letting the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) hound conservatives.

    Not all these scandals are real. In Libya the administration failed to anticipate an attack or to protect its staff: a tragic failure, but not a crime. Spin-doctors tied themselves in knots to avoid saying anything that might hurt the president’s re-election campaign, but that is what spin-doctors do. The snooping scandal is murkier, and seems to have involved an abuse of power. But the IRS scandal is unambiguously outrageous.

    In this section
    Related topics

    Tax officials singled out the president’s opponents for extra scrutiny. Conservative groups seeking tax-exempt status were subjected to long delays and intimidating questionnaires; liberal groups, less so. Mr Obama did not order this, but it still damages him. How can he persuade Americans of the virtues of bigger government if even the IRS is politically biased?

    The perils of paralysis

    The danger is that Mr Obama will achieve little in his second term. Congress remains gridlocked. Democrats and Republicans could spend the next four years squabbling and issuing subpoenas. To avoid this, Mr Obama needs to keep his eyes on the big picture. Even as Republicans pepper his administration with probes, he needs to keep pushing for solutions to America’s main domestic problems. He may believe it is impossible to work with congressional Republicans, but his legacy depends on him trying. He will lose leverage if he delays. Next year Washington’s attention will be on the mid-term elections; after that Mr Obama will be a lame duck.

    Three areas offer big long-term pay-offs and grounds for bipartisan co-operation: immigration, entitlements and tax reform. On immigration, the ball is already rolling: a bill made it through a Senate committee on May 21st. Centrists in both parties understand the economic benefits of allowing more foreign brains and hands into the country. They also see benefits for their own parties: Republicans want to stop alienating Hispanics; Democrats want to extend citizenship to millions of likely Democratic voters. A lot could still go wrong, but with a push from both parties a deal is possible.

    Taxes will be harder. Republicans want to cut them; Democrats think the government needs more cash. On one thing, however, both sides can agree: the tax code is too complex (seearticle). Tax compliance wastes 3m man-years each year. One reason why the IRS scandal strikes such a chord is that so many Americans are terrified of the taxman. Few can be sure that they have not broken some rule or another. More important, a tax code full of loopholes is inefficient and regressive: it encourages too much consumption of some things (home-ownership, health spending) and deters others (such as work) through higher marginal rates; and the lion’s share of the tax breaks goes to richer Americans. Corporate-tax rules are an utter mess, as the row over Apple’s taxes illustrates (see article).

    Two lawmakers are trying to reform the code: Dave Camp, a Republican, and Max Baucus, a Democrat. Mr Obama should lend his weight to their efforts. Ideally, they would start afresh with no loopholes and much lower rates. Republicans should love this: if Congress were to scrap all loopholes and deductions, it could nearly halve income-tax rates and still raise the same amount of money. Democrats should like it, too: a more efficient tax system would let them pay for the same amount of government with less

    Copyright © The Economist Newspaper Limited 2013. All rights reserved

    drag on growth. The snag is that voters define “loopholes” as other people’s tax breaks. Their own, they rather like. Getting rid of particular boondoggles such as the mortgage-interest deduction may prove impossible. But capping the overall amount of deductions any individual can take should not be, so long as both parties have their fingerprints on the bill, thus sharing the credit and the blame.

    Grasping the third rail together

    Democrats would like tax reform to raise more revenue. Republicans might agree if it is tied to an even bigger reform: making entitlements sustainable. This will be hardest of all. Social Security (public pensions), Medicare (health care for the old) and Medicaid (health care for the cash-strapped) are immensely popular. Politicians who mess with them tend to lose their jobs. And the nation’s finances are less alarming than they were in 2009. The budget deficit has been roughly halved, and health-care inflation has fallen. All this makes it harder to persuade voters that fixing entitlements is urgent.

    Yet it is. Reforms will take years to have an effect, so they need to start now. Otherwise as Americans age the cost of pensions and health care will eventually crowd out other public services and imperil the nation’s fiscal health. Our memo offers some suggestions for averting this calamity. The details matter less than a couple of broad principles. First, as people live longer, they should work longer (we suggest America’s retirement age could gradually rise to 70). Second, for all the hot air about “death panels”, the cost- effectiveness of a health-care system matters. More than perhaps any government in the world, America’s pays doctors to do stuff, rather than keep people well. That has to change.

    Mr Obama cannot solve any of this alone. Offer the Republicans too little and they will scaremonger from the sidelines. So he should be bold. He could offer to raise the age of eligibility and expand means-testing for Medicare and push more people off disability benefits and into work. This may not bring enough Republicans on board, but the only way to find out is to try. Letting in dynamic immigrants, revamping the tax code and reforming entitlements would make the Great Society safe for another generation. Not enough to get Mr Obama’s face carved on Mount Rushmore, but not bad.

     

    Copyright © The Economist Newspaper Limited 2013. All rights reserved

  • Monaco Grand Prix winner Nico Rosberg follows in father's footsteps

    Nico Rosberg celebrates after winning the Monaco Grand Prix
    Nico Rosberg celebrates after winning the Monaco Grand Prix – only the second win of his career. Photograph: Hoch Zwei/Action Images

    Nico Rosberg looked almost overwhelmed by his victory in the Monaco Grand Prix, 30 years after his father, Keke, had triumphed on the same tight streets. It was the 27-year-old's second win of his career – following his victory in China last year – and he led from start to finish as he moved up to sixth in the championship.

    Rosberg finished ahead of Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel and on the day after an enthralling Champions League final it was a good time to be German. It was some weekend for Rosberg. He dominated all three of the practice sessions before winning the qualifying session on Saturday afternoon. And he had also taken pole in the previous three races.

    He sprinted away but three times he was hauled back by the introduction of the safety car. However, the safety car might have helped because it allowed Rosberg to drive well within himself for several laps and that protected his sensitive tyres.

    We may have to reassess the Leonardo Di Caprio lookalike from Wiesbaden. Lewis Hamilton, who often looked the quicker Mercedes man at the start of the season, has been pushed back into second place in the team.

    Rosberg said: "This is the most special race for me to win, it was incredible, unreal. That is what is special about the sport, so unreal – all these emotions make up for the difficult moments. It is amazing. When I was quite young watching this race, my first memory was Ayrton Senna with the yellow helmet in the red and white [car]."

    Rosberg, who is 60 points behind the championship leader Vettel, said: "I don't want to talk about [the title] at all, because two weeks ago we were 70 seconds away [from victory]. Today we were in a much better position. It is a different track, and I had chance to take it easy, saving the tyres. We should not get overexcited for the next couple of races. We still have a bit of an issue with our race pace, and also with the development race, everyone is pushing forward."

    Hamilton, who was fourth behind the two Red Bulls, took his defeat on the chin. "It wasn't the team's fault, it was my mistakes. I was told to have a six‑ second gap and I had more. I lost out massively. That's motor racing. Big congrats to Nico. I don't put it down to bad luck. I just wasn't good enough this weekend. I apologised to the team. I lost so many points.

    "The whole weekend was a missed opportunity. Nico fully deserved it. He was much quicker and more on it all weekend. Good for him and the team. I'm really happy for them."

    But the real losers were Lotus's Kimi Raikkonen and Ferrari's Fernando Alonso, who saw their championship challenges falter. Alonso was seventh, after failing to find his best form all weekend, while Raikkonen won a single point for his 10th place, though he maintained his points-winning sequence of races to 23.

     

  • Concert Industry Struggles With ‘Bots’ That Siphon Off Tickets

    Nadav Neuhaus for The New York Times

    Darlene Schild of Lincroft, N.J., tried but failed to buy Justin Bieber tickets on her iPhone app for her daughter, Abby.

     

     

    J. Emilio Flores for The New York Times

    Ticketmaster hired John Carnahan, an expert on machine learning, from Yahoo in late 2011 to lead its anti-bot effort

     


    May 26, 2013
     

    Concert Industry Struggles With ‘Bots’ That Siphon Off Tickets

     

    By 

     

    As the summer concert season approaches, music fans and the concert industry that serves them have a common enemy in New York. And in Russia. And in India.

    That enemy is the bot.

    Bots,” computer programs used by scalpers, are a hidden part of a miserable ritual that plays out online nearly every week in which tickets to hot shows seem to vanish instantly.

    Long a mere nuisance to the live music industry, these cheap and widely available programs are now perhaps its most reviled foe, frustrating fans and feeding a multibillion-dollar secondary market for tickets.

    According to Ticketmaster, bots have been used to buy more than 60 percent of the most desirable tickets for some shows; in a recent lawsuit, the company accused one group of scalpers of using bots to request up to 200,000 tickets a day.

    Ticketmaster and its parent company, Live Nation Entertainment, have stepped up efforts to combat bots, in part to improve the ticket-buying experience for concertgoers, but also to burnish the company’s reputation with consumers. The result has been a game of cat and mouse between the company and the bots.

    “As with hackers, you can solve it today, and they’re rewriting code tomorrow,” said Michael Rapino, Live Nation’s chief executive. “Thus the arms race.”

    In late 2011, Ticketmaster hired John Carnahan, an expert on machine learning who fought online advertising frauds at Yahoo, to lead its anti-bot effort.

    By monitoring the behavior of each visitor to Ticketmaster’s site, the company can determine the likelihood of a customer being human or a machine. For example, a human may click a series of buttons at a range of speeds and in different spots on a screen, but bots can give themselves away by rapidly clicking on precisely the same spot each time.

    A screen on Mr. Carnahan’s desk in Los Angeles shows Ticketmaster’s incoming traffic, with a rainbow of colors at the bottom and splotches of red on top representing suspicious activity. On a recent Thursday afternoon, the screen showed that the red visitors were making 600 times more ticket requests than those the system identified as being most likely human.

    Bots are not kicked off the system, but rather “speedbumped” — slowed down, sent to the end of the line or given some other means of interference, to allow a regular customer through.

    “We’re not trying to stop anybody from buying tickets,” Mr. Carnahan said. “We’re just trying to make sure that a fan can buy the tickets.”

    Ticketing bots are often inexpensive and programmed in countries beyond easy reach of American law enforcement. Rob Rachwald of the computer security company FireEye, which is not working with Ticketmaster, points out that one site — available in English and Russian — charges just $13.90 for the keys to 10,000 Captchas, those squiggly lines that test whether a potential customer is human.

    In January, Ticketmaster replaced most of its old Captchas with newer and more sophisticated versions. The company is also introducing a system for mobile devices that aims to eliminate Captcha-style tests altogether.

    Live Nation will not say how many of the 148 million tickets it sells each year are bought using bots, and in many cases it may not know. Few ever admit to using the programs; official groups like the National Association of Ticket Brokers, which represents many of the biggest resellers, condemn them and say they supports anti-bot measures. But people at nearly every level of the concert business blame bots for wreaking all kinds of economic havoc.

    “There are sold-out shows in reserved-seat houses in New York City where we will have 20 percent no-show, and that 20 percent will be down in the front of the house,” said Jim Glancy ofThe Bowery Presents, an independent concert promoter in New York. “It’s speculators who bought a bunch of seats and didn’t get the price they wanted.”

    Concert promoters, artist managers and ticketing services say that bots are now an ever-present force, not only during the high-traffic moments when a big show officially goes on sale, but also at the odd moments when a promoter releases a few dozen extra seats with no announcement.

    Darlene Schild, of Lincroft, N.J., may well have experienced the reach of bots firsthand recently when she tried to buy Justin Bieber tickets as an 11th birthday present for her daughter. Like any well-trained concertgoer, she fired up Ticketmaster’s iPhone app just as the tickets went on sale, but after 15 fruitless minutes she gave up.

    “The first thing that crossed my mind was that some ticket-buying service bought them all,” Ms. Schild said. “Or someone could dial quicker than me. Some technology — something.”

    Last month, Ticketmaster sued 21 people in federal court, accusing them of fraud, copyright infringement and other offenses in using bots to search for millions of tickets over the last two years.

    The legal status of bots is unclear. They are banned in a handful of states, but those laws have proved largely ineffectual, and enforcement at the federal level has also been a disappointment to the concert business.

    Three years ago, four men connected with a company called Wiseguy Tickets were indicted on conspiracy, wire fraud and other charges, for apparently using bots to get tickets to Bruce Springsteen, Hannah Montana and other concerts.

    The case hinged on whether the men had committed actual crimes or had merely violated the terms of service on Ticketmaster’s site; in the end three of the men were sentenced only to probation and community service (one remained at large).

    “They got a slap on the wrist,” Mr. Rapino said. “It wasn’t much of an actual deterrent.”

    Not everyone is convinced that bots are the primary villain of the everyday concertgoer. The Fan Freedom Project, a nonprofit group financed by StubHub, has pushed for anti-bot laws around the country, and Jon Potter, its president, praised Ticketmaster for filing its lawsuit last month.

    But he also criticized the industry practice of “holds,” in which sometimes large blocks of tickets are reserved for sponsors, fan club members and industry contacts, and never go on sale to the general public.

    When it comes to the secondary ticket market, Live Nation has a complicated position. As much as it is trying to block bots, it also profits from the ticket resale market through TicketsNow — its own version of StubHub — as well as through deals with major sports groups, like the National Basketball Association. Mr. Rapino sees no contradiction in Live Nation’s stance.

    “I have no problem if you bought a Justin Timberlake ticket and you decide to go sell that ticket to somebody,” he said. “We would first and foremost want to make sure that the first ticket sold, that the fan has a shot to buy that ticket.”

     

    Copyright. 2013. The New York Times. All Rights Reserved

     

     

  • Tornado Rescue Efforts in Oklahoma Near an End

    PLAY VIDEO

     

    Matthew Staver for The New York Times

    Reflections on the Oklahoma Tornado: As the rescue effort continues, workers sifted through debris while residents started returning to their homes and assessing the cleanup.

     

    May 21, 2013
     

    Tornado Rescue Efforts in Oklahoma Near an End

     

    By  and 

     

    MOORE, Okla. — Oklahoma officials said Tuesday afternoon that they hoped to finish their search for survivors of a massive tornado by nightfall, a little more than 24 hours after the Oklahoma City area was slammed by a storm packing 190-mile per hour winds and measuring nearly two miles across that killed dozens of people, injured hundreds of others and leveled buildings to their foundations.

    The brunt of the damage occurred in the suburb of Moore, where rescue workers struggled all day to make their way through streets cut off by debris and around downed power lines to those who were feared trapped under hills of rubble. The crews, using thermal-imaging equipment and dogs, sifted through scattered piles of red brick, steel beams, utility poles and upended cars where houses and shops once stood.

    Gary Bird, the city’s fire chief, said that more than 200 people worked overnight Monday and into Tuesday looking for survivors. “We will go through every damaged piece of property in this city,” he said Tuesday afternoon. He said he thought the search would be completed by sundown.

    Officials said that it was still too early to say precisely how many people had been killed, but the toll appears to be significantly less than what had been originally feared. On Monday night, Amy Elliott, the spokeswoman for the Oklahoma City medical examiner, said at least 51 people had died and 40 more bodies were on their way, but on Tuesday, Ms. Elliott said that count “is no longer accurate.”

    As of Tuesday morning, the medical examiner had confirmed 24 dead, nine of them children, she said. Of the dead, 20 were in Moore, and four in Oklahoma City, officials said.

    “This was the storm of storms,” said Mick Cornett, Oklahoma City’s mayor.

    Gov. Mary Fallin said at a news conference Tuesday that officials had not yet arrived at a conclusive death toll, but that 237 people had been injured. Officials have said that number includes about 70 children.

    The risk of tornadoes throughout the region remained at an elevated level through Tuesday afternoon, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Storm Prediction Center in Norman, and throughout the day, rescue efforts were hampered by wind and rain.

    A continuing focus of concern was Plaza Towers Elementary School, which was reduced to a pile of twisted metal and toppled walls. Rescue workers were able to pull several children from the rubble, and on Tuesday, as a chilly rain swept through the area, crews were still struggling to cut through fallen beams and clear debris. Officials said Tuesday afternoon that they were not sure whether all of the school’s students, teachers and staff had been accounted for.

    At Briarwood Elementary School in Oklahoma City, on the border with Moore, cars were thrown through the facade and the roof was torn off.

    Albert Ashwood, an emergency management official, said the two schools that were hit lacked safe rooms for storms, because the appropriate financing had not been applied for. Limited funds meant that other priorities were set, he said. The presence of safe rooms, however, he said, however, did “not necessarily” mean that more students would have survived. But it is a “mitigating” factor, he said. “This was a very unique tornado,” he said.

    Despite being located in a region prone to tornadoes — and being devastated by one in 1999 — the city of Moore, according to its Web site, has no ordinance requiring storm safe rooms in public or private facilities, and the city itself lacked a community shelter.

    “All of the schools in the Moore Public School District have plans — coordinated with the Emergency Management Office of the city for monitoring severe weather conditions and for placing students and staff into shelter during severe weather events,” according to the Web site, although the schools lacked underground shelters.

    President Obama, who on Monday night declared a federal disaster in five Oklahoma counties, said during brief remarks at the White House on Tuesday morning that the tornado had been “one of the most destructive in history,” and that he had informed aides that “Oklahoma needs to get everything it needs right away.” He said Federal Emergency Management Agency officials had been dispatched to Moore, which has a population of about 55,000, to aid in the recovery effort.

    “For all those who’ve been affected, we recognize that you face a long road ahead,” Mr. Obama said. “In some cases, there will be enormous grief that has to be absorbed. But you will not travel that path alone.”

    Governor Fallin called the tornado one of the most “horrific” disasters the state has ever faced, but pledged to rebuild. After taking an aerial tour of the area, she said the trail of ruin might be 20-miles long and as much as two miles wide.

    “It is hard to look at,” she said. “There’s just sticks and bricks.”

    Shortly before midnight on Monday, the area near the Plaza Towers school was eerily quiet and shrouded in darkness from a widespread power outage. Local authorities and F.B.I. agents patrolled the streets, restricting access to the school.

    Half a mile away, the only sounds on Southwest Fourth Street were of barking dogs and tires on wet pavement littered with debris. Hovering in the sky, a helicopter shined a spotlight on the damaged neighborhoods. In the darkness, the century-old Moore Cemetery was a ghostly wreck: women’s clothing and blankets clung to the branches of tilting trees and twisted sheets of metal ripped from nearby buildings or homes were strewn among the graves. Many headstones had been pushed flat to the ground by the wind.

    The tornado touched down at 2:56 p.m., 16 minutes after the first warning went out, and traveled for 17 miles, according to the National Weather Service in Norman, Okla. It was on the ground for about 40 minutes, first striking the town of Newcastle before thrashing its way to Moore, about 10 miles away.

    Its top wind speeds reached 190 miles per hour.

    Severe weather is common in the region this time of year, and Moore has seen other tornadoes, including in May 1999, when a tornado with record wind speeds of 302 m.p.h. destroyed much of the town, which was then rebuilt.

    On Monday, Kelcy Trowbridge, her husband and their three young children piled into their neighbor’s cellar just outside of Moore and huddled together for about five minutes, wrapped under a blanket as the tornado screamed above them, debris smashing against the cellar door.

    They emerged to find their home flattened and the family car resting upside down a few houses away. Ms. Trowbridge’s husband rushed toward what was left of their home and began sifting through the debris, then stopped, and told her to call the police.

    He had found the body of a little girl, about 2 or 3 years old, she said.

    “He knew she was already gone,” Ms. Trowbridge said. “When the police got there, he just bawled.”

    She said: “My neighborhood is gone. It’s flattened. Demolished. The street is gone. The next block over, it’s in pieces.”

    John Eligon and Manny Fernandez reported from Moore, and Michael Schwirtz from New York. Reporting was contributed by Nick Oxford from Moore, Leslie Metzger and Kathleen Johnson from Norman, Okla., Dan Frosch from Denver, Timothy Williams and Christine Hauser from New York, John Schwartz from Dallas and Peter Baker from Washington.

     

    Copyright. 2013. The New York Times Company. All Rights Reserved

  • 100 Things Every Real Las Vegan Should Know

     

    By Seven Staff

    February 7th, 2013

     
     

    Ours is a town of impermanence. The casinos you see on the Las Vegas Strip today are not the ones your dad knew back in the day. Of course, your dad probably wasn’t here back in the day. Nearly everyone you know, in fact, came from somewhere else, and plenty of them are hanging out long enough to get their mortgages upright. Even the springs at the Springs Preserve deserted this place years ago.

    But there are things about Las Vegas that remain relevant amid all the swirling change: the tried and true facts, theories and spirit of this place. There are things that have come and gone but still define us. And we’re not talking about the nonsense that out-of-towners try to put on us: “Prostitution is legal,” “The town was founded by Bugsy Siegel,” that sort of thing. No, these are the things that every Las Vegan should know to be true in his or her heart-of-hearts. The things that make this place real.

    There are millions of facts about this town that are nice to know, but we’ve reduced it down to the 100 that you should know if you’re going to live here longer than a few weekends a year. Read them, internalize them, and see if they don’t make you feel a little more attached to this place than you did when you came in.

    1Reno is nearly twice as far away as Los Angeles.

    2What the inside of the Huntridge Theatre used to look like. The key features were the split-level lobby, the exposed barrel ceiling (installed after the cave-in of 1995) and the circular indentation in the ceiling that once accommodated a chandelier. You get bonus points if you remember what it looked like from the stage—the rows of battered red seats, the gently curved back wall that boosted the sound of monaural movies but made it difficult for touring bands to get a good mix.

    93742365_10_250w.jpg

    3Dan Tanna.

    4The one book about Las Vegas you need to read is Stanley Paher’s Las Vegas: As It Began—As It Grew. It was written in 1971, published by the author’s own company, measures 10 by 13 inches and, from the outside, looks like a coloring book. But open it up and you’ll find a treasure trove of information, classic photographs and anecdotes about the Valley’s infancy—Paiutes and pioneers, Mormon missionariesand military forts. The tale of O.D. Gass’ establishment of the Las Vegas Ranch is told in loving detail, as is the epic story of Helen Stewart. There are other great candidates—the muckraking Green Felt Jungle, Hal Rothman’s magisterial Neon Metropolis and Eugene Moehring’s yeoman history, Resort City in the Sunbelt. But Paher dug into the near-forgotten sands of Las Vegas history and produced an unassuming classic.

    helen_250w.jpg

    5Helen Stewart saved this city before it was even a city. She took over the Las Vegas Ranch after her husband Archibald’s shooting in 1884 and ran it until selling it in 1902 to copper baron William Andrews Clark, who wanted to build a railroad (and did). Had she sold her holdings sooner, Las Vegas might not have developed as it did. After the sale, Stewart remained in town, helping to start the Mesquite Club and serving as the first woman on the school board and on a jury, giving the Southern Paiutes land for the colony they still live on Downtown, and becoming known as “The First Lady of Las Vegas.”

    6“If you have a weakness, Las Vegas will punish you.” – Hal Rothman, Neon Metropolis, 2003

    7This is an internationally respected center of activity for celebrity meltdowns, including our gossip columnist Jason Scavone’s all-time favorite: Shecky Greene made playing in the lounge a viable hot ticket at the Riviera, and he was the headliner when Elvis made his first abortive Vegas run at The Last Frontier, but it was at Caesars Palace where Greene perhaps made his most lasting impression. To hear Shecky tell it, he picked up his car after a show one night in 1966, drunk, because the parking attendants always thought it was funny to hand him the keys in those situations. He tore off down the Strip, slammed through a post, spun out across the street and wound up in the fountains in front of Caesars Palace. The apocryphal climax: When the cops rolled up on the scene, wipers running and all, Shecky is alleged to have rolled down the window and said, “No spray wax.” (Check out the rest of Scavone’s favorites.)

    8We should be in the Guinness Book of Records for having broken so many freakin’ records. A few favorites: highest thrill rides (Stratosphere), most hotel rooms at one intersection (14,762, Trop and Las Vegas Boulevard), simultaneous wine-bottle openings (308) and most simultaneous high-fives (3,504—thank you, Zappos).

    9UNLV has one of the top two hotel-administration schools in the nation. The other one is Cornell. Cornell’s in the Ivy League. So we’re, like, practically in the Ivy League.

    10Las Vegas is second in the nation in ragweed allergies (we trail Phoenix). Other Valley allergen-producing species you may enjoy: olive trees, mulberry trees, oleander and Bermuda grass. Like most of us, they are aliens.

    11You should never drive under the Charleston Underpass when it rains, and you should never go to the Strip on New Year’s Eve.

    12The 515 and the 95 and the 93 are—for a miraculous multi-numeraled stretch through the heart of the Vegas Valley—all the same road.

    13Speaking of: A person moves to town and thinks Lake Mead Parkway and Lake Mead Boulevard are connected. He or she becomes horribly lost. Finally, this person realizes that one road is in Henderson and the other is at the north end of the Valley. Years later, this person tells the next set of newbies that the two Lake Meads are completely parallel and—as parallel lines tend to be—disconnected for all eternity. This makes the former newbie feel like a wise old local. But wait! One day he or she keeps driving all the way down Lake Mead Parkway until it turns into Lakeshore Road, then turns left at Northshore Road, which, after a few short and scenic miles, links up with Lake Mead Boulevard and leads back to the city. It’s almost as if the two Lake Meads were really one long, horseshoe-shaped road. This place is full of surprises.

    14Fifth Street is not really missing; it’s Las Vegas Boulevard.

    breakfast2_250w.jpg

    15There are several places to get a decent breakfast at 4 a.m., and many of them aren’t in casinos. Longtime Las Vegans experienced in matters of caffeine and carbs recommend the Bootlegger, Tiffany’s Café (located in the former White Cross Drugs at Las Vegas Boulevard and Oakey), the Peppermill, Honey Pig and Home Plate Grill. Your casino options—the Henry (at the Cosmopolitan), Du-par’s (at the Golden Gate) and Grand Luxe (at the Venetian)—will also bed down your hunger, but walking the length of the casino floor may bring it back.

    16It’s impossible to fry an egg on the hood of a car in the heat of summer. Don’t ever try it. We did once and ruined our paint and our appetite.

    17We actually like our heat dry, so go roll your eyes someplace else. Try Orlando.

    18The Valley averages 300 days of sunshine per year, yet is among the 14 states with the lowest incidence of skin cancer in the U.S. In a land of 115-degree summer days, people learn how to get things done at night or in the shade.

    19You don’t need to water your lawn every day. Even in August.

    20The weather forecast actually is important here—just not our forecast. We are wholly and completely at the mercy of the annual snowpack of the Rocky Mountains, whose runoff on the western slopes flows into the Colorado River. If you could, listen to some John Denver today and say a little prayer.

    21The dark, sculpted mountain south of Frenchman Mountain—the one that looms over Lake Las Vegas like a sentry saying “Build no more!”—is called Lava Butte. Just down the west face of Lava Butte is one of the Valley’s most beautiful—and unsung—geologic features, the aptly named Rainbow Gardens.

    22There’s a genuine fallout shelter built underneath the Boulevard Mall. And in the concrete outside the mall entrance rests a time capsule placed on April 29, 1966, to be opened in 2066.

    stratosphere-tilt_250w.jpg

    23One leg of the Stratosphere has a kink in it—the result of overcompensation FOR what was thought to be a construction error.

    24When it’s time to leave the casino.

    25You’re not gonna get a cab if you’re leaving a hotel with a big nightlife presence between 1 and 4 a.m. It’s best to walk to a less-busy hotel.

    26The MGM Grand fire of November 1980, which killed 85 and injured 700 more, didn’t happen at the place we now know as the MGM Grand. The hotel-casino now known as Bally’s was once consumed by the second-worst hotel fire in American history.

    27You can ride local RTC buses (and the Strip-Downtown Express) for a full 24 hours for just $5. Transportation deficiencies may be blocking Las Vegas’ road to becoming a major city, but few other places offer such a sweet transit deal.

    28As great as the hiking at Red Rock and Mount Charleston may be, there are several unsung hiking areas worthy of exploration—such as Lake Mead National Recreation Area and the Desert National Wildlife Refuge.

    bicycle_250w.jpg

    29Bicycle riders in Las Vegas are required to have headlights, rear reflectors, bells and brakes in good working order. They’re not strictly required to wear helmets, though judging by the cavalier manner in which many drivers disobey the three-foot bicycle passing rule, that’s a good idea.

    30The best place to ride a bike in the Valley is the 34-mile River Mountains Loop Trail.

    31That the overused exclamation “Vegas, baby!” came from the 1996 Doug Liman comedySwingers, in which Jon Favreau and Vince Vaughn drive all night from Los Angeles to hit the Stardust, where they lose a bundle at the tables and notably fail to get laid.

    32The Stratosphere Tower is your north star if you get lost.

    33You’ll never get lost if you know your mountain ranges. Those are the Spring Mountains to the west, home to both Mount Charleston and the Red Rock National Recreation Area. To the south is the McCullough Range; its most prominent feature, the antenna-festooned Black Mountain, is your lodestar in the southeast. The landmark in the northeast is Frenchman Mountain—which many people mistakenly call Sunrise Mountain. To the north is the Sheep Range and the Desert National Wildlife Refuge.

    34The bare spot on the face of Frenchman Mountain is an old landfill—named, amusingly enough, Sunrise Mountain Landfill. The landfill closed in 1993 after becoming home to 25 million tons of waste.

    35How to spot a hooker ».

    36The Las Vegas Country Club was once the center of our little universe. Where else could you play tennis on a court next to Tony Spilotro, hear Moe Dalitz paged over the intercom, then go to the lounge and sit next to Joe DiMaggio’s poker game? (For an LVCC reminiscence, read “The Realm of Kings”.)

    37Sapphire, the world’s largest strip club at 71,000 square feet, used to be an athletic club called the Sporting House. In the early 1980s, it was the place for a pickup basketball game.

    southwest_250w.jpg

    38Those are real strippers on your inbound Southwest flight on Thursday and your outbound flight on Sunday. Dancers refer to the airline as “Stripper Air.” Yes, their performing names are fake.

    39Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman wrote our unofficial city anthem, “Viva Las Vegas,” in 1963. Elvis Presley performed it in the film of the same name in 1964, and it has since been covered by Bruce Springsteen, the Dead Kennedys, ZZ Top, Vince Neil, Nina Hagen, Dolly Parton, Wayne Newton, the Residents, Johnny Ramone, the Stray Cats and pretty much anyone else who has ever recorded sound.

    40The paint on your car will surely fade unless you park it in the shade. Red cars seem to fade faster than others. And white cars have a higher resale value here, probably because they do a better job of deflecting heat.

    41Downtown is nearly everything north of Sahara, bordered by Valley View and Eastern, and ending a bit north of Cashman Field.

    0001-album-3-12.2_250w.jpg

    42The most underappreciated Las Vegas photo of all time is of our city’s true founder, U.S. Senator William Andrews Clark of Montana, triumphantly arriving here in 1905, amid the twilight of America’s Gilded Age.

    43Caesars Palace doesn’t have an apostrophe because Jay Sarno wanted everyone who visited the resort to feel like a Caesar. Even you, Zach Galifianakis.

    cocktail_250w.jpg

    44The waitresses at Caesars Palace used to be sewn into their dresses.

    45Las Vegas figures prominently into tennis legend. The Alan King Caesars Palace Tennis Classic came to Las Vegas every year during the golden age of American men’s tennis (1972-85)—meaning we got to see Jimmy Connors and John McEnroe at their brattiest and most brilliant. The tournament was a sort of community tennis holiday—one day, a little mop-headed kid named Agassi even got to hit with Connors on center court before a match. It’s a shame the tourney didn’t last until his heyday.

    lonnie_3546-final_250w.jpg

    46The Paradise Crest home of Dr. Lonnie Hammargren, formerly this state’s lieutenant governor, is largely uncontested as the weirdest crib in the Valley. If you don’t know why, we won’t tell you. If he opens it up again on Nevada Day, as he has off and on for years, be sure to visit.

    47This town briefly had a horse track, the Las Vegas Park, from September 4 to October 19, 1953. It was in the space between what is now Joe W. Brown Drive and Sahara Avenue, behind the current site of the LVH. It only featured 13 days of thoroughbred racing. Ironically, LVH would go on to become the best spot in town for horse bettors.

    48We have tried professional sports no fewer than 28 times, including women’s volleyball (Vipers), two roller-hockey teams (Flash, Coyotes) and two football teams named the Aces whose leagues folded before ever kicking off. In all there have been nine football teams, seven basketball teams, five soccer teams, four hockey teams, two baseball teams and one volleyball team. Four are still active (the 51s, Wranglers, Legends and Sin).

    49Parking is actually pretty cheap here compared with other cities. Quit yer bitchin’.

    50If the monorail had gone down the center of the Strip, it would be a world attraction. Just sayin’.

    51Many “specials” aren’t listed on menus. Marc Sgrizzi’s new pizza joint on Centennial Parkway, Novecento, can bring dishes from Parma, his other restaurant, on request. One of our most unheralded Thai restaurants, Penn’s Thai House in Henderson, makes the most incredible sweet steamed buns for dessert. And perhaps our town’s greatest secret deal is the $7.77 steak, shrimp, potato and salad special at Mr. Lucky’s in the Hard Rock Hotel (although you need a players club card these days).

    52Never pay full price for a show on the Strip before asking for the locals discount.

    53Locals don’t pay to get into the club. What, are you kidding?

    54“Industry Night” really means “Locals Night.” It’s just assumed that if you live here, you must work in hospitality. So, y’know, get yourself that Nevada driver’s license so you can flash it at the door.

    55Cashing your paychecks in a casino can actually be a good idea ».

    56Never buy insurance in blackjack.

    maitre2_250w.jpg

    57The maître d’ used to enjoy more respect and prestige, like today’s nightclub hosts. And they were tipped better back in the day, too.

    58How to tip, Vegas-style ».

    59The romantic age of the casino is over. Even when bosses are as flamboyant and nationally recognized as Steve Wynn and Sheldon Adelson, the major casino issues (union contracts, regulatory reform, online gaming) are really decided by committee.

    60The most powerful political entity in the greater metropolitan area is the Clark County Commission. Because the Strip is entirely within Clark County and not in the City of Las Vegas, the commission deals most directly and closely with the state’s most powerful industry, which generates the state’s greatest revenues. Perhaps the greatest proof of the commission’s power is that several of its members in recent years—including Chris Giunchigliani and Tom Collins—left the Nevada Legislature to serve on it.

    61Our economy is still a one-horse engine, with nearly half of the region’s gross domestic product related to the hospitality industry. In 2011, tourism generated $40 billion in revenue.

    62From hotel workers to homebuilders, Las Vegas had always been a place where a working-class job could lead to a middle-class life. The boom threatened that balance by ratcheting home prices to levels unaffordable without gimmicky mortgages. And the bust threatened it more by pushing our unemployment above 15 percent in 2009 (it’s still above 10). Nevertheless, we remain a town of blue-collar dreamers. In fact, a recent study projects that the working class will grow here by more than 15 percent by 2020, second only to the growth in Washington, D.C. Whether those workers will have the same access to the American dream as their Las Vegas forebears remains to be seen.

    63Our chief contribution to the culinary world is exposing the mainstream to trends on the American culinary landscape. People from the heartland may not partake in restaurants by chefs like Michael Mina, Wolfgang Puck or Joël Robuchon, but they visit Vegas in droves, and most at least take notice. In the long run, Vegas brings imagination and diversity to the national food scene—if not directly, at least by slow osmosis. After all, even buffets here have dozens of dishes that you’d never see in Des Moines.

    mob_250w.jpg

    64Las Vegas was not better when the mob ran the town. Just smaller.

    65The Las Vegas Sun wasn’t always an insert in theReview-Journal. The newspaper had not only a purpose, but a heyday: For decades, it was this town’s aggressive little independent paper, with voices that ranged from publisher Hank Greenspun’s “Where I Stand” columns to John L. Smith’s views on sports.

    66Hank Greenspun—whose storied life included gun-running to the Haganah during Israel’s battle for statehood in 1947 (he was later pardoned by President Kennedy) and telling Senator Joseph McCarthy just where to stick it—got his start in media as Bugsy Siegel’s publicist.

    0020-0018_250w.jpg

    67The first Strip resort was built by Thomas Hull, not Bugsy Siegel. Hull’s El Rancho opened in 1941.

    68E. Parry Thomas is the most important Las Vegan of all time. He came here in the mid-1950s to run the Bank of Las Vegas for a group of Utah and Nevada investors. He concentrated on banking while Jerome Mack emphasized real estate. Thomas was the first banker who systematically loaned money to casino owners, whom banks usually avoided because of their mob connections, real and perceived. Thomas reasoned that they would respond to respect with respect, and he was right. He also helped a young Las Vegan named Steve Wynn on a land deal and then with obtaining control of the Golden Nugget.

    69In 1980, 8 percent of Clark County residents were Hispanic. Today, that number is nearly 30 percent.

    70The block now occupied by luxury estates on Tomiyasu Lane used to be part of Bill Tomiyasu’s sprawling farm. In the 1930s, its produce fed workers building Hoover Dam.

    71You will make many friends in Las Vegas, but many of them will also move away within a couple of years. In 2010, for example, 30,000 residents moved here; in 2011, nearly 70,000 moved out.

    72Nevada’s land is about 80 percent publicly owned/managed by the Bureau of Land Management, Clark County, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Forest Service, etc. This creates both a natural boundary to excessive development—provided leaders keep these public lands intact—and unique opportunities for outdoor recreation.

    dam_250w.jpg

    73Only 4 percent of our electricity comes from Hoover Dam.

    74Southern Nevada and the entire desert Southwest profoundly owe their growth to the federal government. “Without power from Hoover Dam and water from Lake Mead, today’s Las Vegas (not to mention today’s Phoenix and much of today’s Southern California) is unthinkable. The Strip came into existence in the 1940s because of the old Highway 91 from Los Angeles, and it boomed as a result of the Interstate Highway System, which transformed Highway 91 into Interstate 15 and allowed millions of tourists to cross the Mojave in less than five hours. In the 1950s and ’60s, when most banks wouldn’t touch Vegas, the town’s cash flow came from two decidedly non-libertarian sources: the federal government and the Teamsters Pension Fund. If you harken back to the cowboy days, things still don’t get much more libertarian: The mining industry, the rough-and-tumble source of Nevada’s frontier mythology, owed its viability to the 1862 Pacific Railroad Act signed by President Lincoln—and to the century-and-a-half of preferential tax treatment that followed.” (From “The Freedom Fighters,” November 11, 2010.)

    75All the same, many consider this Libertarian territory.

    76We’re a military town—have been since the 1940s. In Southern Nevada, there’s Nellis Air Force Base, the Thunderbirds, the Test Site and the controversial pilotless Predator and Reaper drone planes operated out of Creech Air Force Base near Indian Springs. And Henderson was “born in America’s defense” with the construction of the Basic Magnesium Plant to supply the valuable metal during World War II.

    77Although only slivers of evidence remain—NFR, Helldorado, Vegas Vic, the Benny Binion statue—this is still a cowboy town at heart. (See “Our Rodeo Soul".)

    beauregard_250w.jpg

    78UNLV’s original mascot was a Confederate wolf named Beauregard, who bore an uncanny resemblance to Goofy.

    79The 1976-77 UNLV men’s basketball team invented the modern local spirit. Those Rebels scored 107 points per game, turned the Convention Center rotunda into a giant, flying-saucer-shaped revival tent, and went all the way to the Final Four. Before that season, out-of-towners would ask, “Do you live in a hotel?” After it, they were just as likely to ask about Jerry Tarkanian and the run-and-gun. Sometimes the insinuations were just as offensive—blackjack school in the desert, etc.—but they drew us together in defense of our town and our team. Las Vegas had always been a host; the Rebels made it a home.

    80Contrary to outsider belief that this Valley is a wasteland, we do have quite an array of indigenous wildlife. Jim Johnson of the Springs Preserve shares his five favorite examples—in order: relict leopard frog, gray fox, desert cottontail, pocket gopher and Gila monster. Ours, in no particular order: roadrunner and coyote.

    81The Spearmint Rhino is not an indigenous species.

    82California fan palms are the only palms native to the Mojave Desert. The rest are imported.

    83Two Vegas kids help maintain the relevance of the increasingly irrelevant medium of broadcast television: Chaparral High grad Anthony Zuiker pretty much owns prime time with his CSI franchise, and Jimmy Kimmel, the pride of Clark High, is poised to take over late night.

    celebs_250w.jpg

    84Las Vegas is where celebrities are born, not made. Some famous Southern Nevadans (who were at least raised here) include actors Matthew Gray Gubler (Criminal Minds) and Charisma Carpenter (Buffy the Vampire Slayer); star pitchers Greg Maddux and Mike Maddux; UFC owner Lorenzo Fertitta, plus UFC fighter Roy Nelson and “Octagon Girl” Arianny Celeste; musicians Jenny Lewis and Ne-Yo; fashion designer Laura Dahl; aerospace visionary Robert Bigelow; adult-film star Jenna Jameson; and members of the Killers and Imagine Dragons. Check out our full list of stars in our heavens ».

    85This is actually a pretty decent town for concerts, no matter what the haters say. Elliott Smith once played a gig Downtown at the now-defunct Enigma Garden Café, circa 1993. Perry Farrell’s Lollapalooza festival made a stop at Sam Boyd Stadium in 1994 (the headliners were the Beastie Boys, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, the Breeders, George Clinton and the P-Funk All Stars, the Boredoms, and Smashing Pumpkins.) And the Beatles played two shows at the Las Vegas Convention Center on August 20, 1964, for which they earned $30,000.

    lied_250w.jpg

    86Frank Gehry’s Lou Ruvo Center isn’t the only Vegas building designed by a superstar architect. Show off your insider knowledge by also name-dropping the Las Vegas Library (Antoine Predock), Tsunami Asian Grill (Thom Mayne), Clark County Library and Performing Arts Center (Michael Graves), Aria (Cesar Pelli) and, of course, La Concha (Paul Revere Williams).

    87Many of the icons of the “family Vegas” era are the work of one architect, Veldon Simpson. He designed Luxor, Excalibur, the current MGM Grand and Circus Circus’ Adventuredome.

    88McCarran is the best damn airport in the West.

    89Departing flights out of Vegas are much more peaceful than arriving flights.

    tiki_250w.jpg

    90The Easter Island head at Sunset Park used to be in front of the Tropicana—a remnant of the hotel’s “Island of Las Vegas” phase. And one of the ornate tiki carvings that once graced the Trop’s porte cochere is now next to the door of Frankie’s Tiki Room on West Charleston Boulevard.

    91San Francisco and Las Vegas have enjoyed a weird bond for many years. Before the Sahara was built, Sahara Avenue was San Francisco Avenue, part of a long tradition of Las Vegas linking itself with the legacy of a boomtown that made it big. Later, during the themed fever dreams of the 1990s, there was a lot of talk about a San Francisco-themed megaresort. We didn’t get that, but we did get the Fog City Diner. And of course, we’ve had the Golden Gate all along—it outlasted San Francisco Street and the Sahara and the fever themes and the Fog City Diner, and it will probably still be here, serving Du-par’s hotcakes, when all the rest of us have been imploded and replaced with better people.

    92If you want to see what Las Vegas looked like 30 years ago, check out the cliffs and dunes at Charlie Frias Park at Tropicana and Decatur.

    93You may have heard the name Moe Dalitz primarily in stories about the mob, but he was also a city father instrumental in the development of the Boulevard Mall, the Las Vegas Country Club and Sunrise Hospital, which is the ninth-largest for-profit hospital in the United States. You should also know the name of his partner in these projects, Irwin Molasky, who went on to build Park Towers and help ring in the age of Manhattanization.

    jr_250w.jpg

    94Irwin Molasky was a founder of Lorimar Productions, which was responsible for such deathless TV classics as Eight Is Enough and Dallas.

    109738130_10_250w.jpg

    95The hotel-casino you’re seeing in that movie is likely the Riviera. The Riv has traditionally been game about allowing film crews to set up shop for extended periods, as long as the casino is mentioned in the finished product. Films shot at the casino includeDiamonds Are ForeverThe HangoverFear and Loathing in Las VegasCasinoGoShowgirls and the original Ocean’s 11Watch some of the casino’s Hollywood cameos ».

    96Maryland Parkway was once the place to shop in Las Vegas. Say the word “WonderWorld” to a longtime local and watch his eyes go all misty about the dime-store rocking horse out front.

    97Fremont Street used to be the best nighttime street in the world. If you’d like to see it in its prime, watch the James Bond movie Diamonds Are Forever or the music video for U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For.”

    98The “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign was created in 1959 by Betty Willis, who also created the iconic signs for the defunct Moulin Rouge casino and the Blue Angel Motel at Charleston and Fremont. The design was never trademarked, which is why it appears on so many of our cheaper souvenirs.

    99“Vegas is a permissive, unfashionable, commercial town.” – cultural critic and former las vegas resident Dave Hickey (in bomb magazine, 1995)

    100Reno sucks.

     

     
     
    Tags: 

  • Sky High and Going Up Fast: Luxury Towers Take New York

    dbox for CIM Group & Macklowe Properties

    A rendering of 432 Park Avenue, an 84-story tower.

     

    Robert Caplin for The New York Times

    Harry B. Macklowe, the developer of 432 Park Avenue, where a penthouse sold for $95 million.

     

     


    May 18, 2013
     

    Sky High and Going Up Fast: Luxury Towers Take New York

     

    By 

     

    Only 10 floors have been completed in what is intended to be the tallest residential building in the Western Hemisphere — a slender, 84-story tower on Park Avenue at 56th Street in Manhattan. But the top penthouse is already under contract for $95 million.

    Other buyers have snapped up apartments on lower floors for prices that are almost as breathtaking. While their identities are not known, it is likely that many are the rootless superrich: Russian metals barons, Latin American tycoons, Arab sheiks and Asian billionaires.

    Ultraluxury housing and construction is booming across Manhattan, which is now beginning to rival London in popularity with the world’s wealthy. The number of condominium buildings in the borough with apartments selling for more than $15 million has risen to 49, up from 33 in 2009, according to CityRealty.

    And an additional 20 or so are under construction or in planning.

    “There’s a great deal of interest in New York, which is seen as relatively cheap compared to other global cities,” said Yolande Barnes, director of research for Savills, an international real-estate firm.

    The growth in high-end projects in Manhattan comes as housing for the working and middle class is in increasingly short supply in the city. These buildings are proving so profitable that they are warping the local real-estate market, making it more difficult to put up more-affordable housing.

    Developers have long complained that the prices of land, construction materials and labor are high in New York, even if they are somewhat less expensive than in London or Hong Kong.

    But builders of ultraluxury apartments have much more latitude on costs because they are securing spectacular prices for their projects.

    As a result, the luxury building trend is driving up the overall cost of land in the city. Several developers maintained that they could build moderately priced housing only if they could get significant tax breaks.

    “There are only two markets, ultraluxury and subsidized housing,” said Rafael Viñoly, the architect who designed the tower on Park Avenue at 56th Street, which is called 432 Park.

    The rush to build these towers underscores the gap between rich and poor in New York City, said James Parrott, chief economist for the Fiscal Policy Institute, a liberal research organization supported by unions. He said that median family income in the city had fallen 8 percent since 2008.

    “Manhattan’s superluxury condo boom, along with rocketing foreclosures in Queens and record homelessness, present an unobstructed view of accelerating polarization in this recovery,” Mr. Parrott said.

    Still, it is not hard to see why developers are flocking to the high end.

    Izak Senbahar, the developer of 56 Leonard, a 60-story tower in TriBeCa where penthouses are going for more than $20 million, signed contracts with buyers for 70 percent of the 140 apartments in just 10 weeks.

    “We were all surprised,” Mr. Senbahar said. “This was not what we expected. There’s a pent-up demand for condos with helicopter views.”

    A decade or two ago, luxury buildings were largely confined to Park and Fifth Avenues.

    Today, they are rising all over Manhattan — from One57 and the Baccarat in Midtown Manhattan to 825 First Avenue on the East Side, 150 Charles Street in Greenwich Village and 30 Park Place downtown.

    “It’s not that location is unimportant,” said Nancy Packes of Signature Marketing Services. “But it’s now all about bigness, lifestyle and views.”

    Determining who is buying many of these properties is a challenge. The superrich often go to great lengths to shield their identities, requiring confidentiality agreements with builders andbrokers and using anonymous corporate entities for purchases.

    In an interview, the developer of 432 Park, Harry B. Macklowe, said he and his partner, CIM Group, already had contracts for nearly $1 billion worth of apartments at the building. Total sales are expected to surpass $3 billion for a building that will cost about $1.25 billion to complete, he said.

    The cheapest apartment in the building, a 351 square-foot studio, costs $1.59 million, according to the offering prospectus.

    About half the buyers are foreigners, Mr. Macklowe said.

    As with many of these buildings, only about a quarter of the units will be occupied at any one time.

    Mr. Macklowe bought and demolished the former Drake Hotel during the real estate boom of 2006 to make way for the tower, before nearly losing the property during the downturn.

    Mr. Macklowe said he and his architect, Mr. Viñoly, designed the tower around the “purest geometric form: the square.” The tower floors are 93 feet square; each side of the building has six 10-foot-by-10-foot windows.

    “This is the building of the 21st century, the way the Empire State Building was the building of the 20th century,” Mr. Macklowe said.The penthouse has six bedrooms, seven bathrooms and a library. A sculptured bathtub sits in front of a window, offering IMAX-like views of the city. A buyer can also pick up a $3.9 million studio for the housekeeper and a private wine cellar for $300,000.

    The building offers residents an indoor-outdoor event space for 350 of their closest friends.

    Mr. Macklowe has sought to reach out to potential buyers with a lavish marketing campaign developed by Dbox, an advertising and branding agency. He distributed an oversize glossy magazine around the world that resembles Vogue, with ads from retailers including Armani and Piaget, and essays by writers including Ruth Reichl and Blake Gopnik.

    He also produced a short film that places the tower in the context of classic images: the ceiling of the Pantheon, New York movie stills, fashion plates and sculptures by Giacometti.

    In one film clip, the aerialist Philippe Petit walks a tightrope that stretches from the Empire State Building to 432 Park with the aid of computer-generated imaging, while Mr. Macklowe emerges from a King Kong outfit.

     

    Copyright. 2013. The New York Times Company. All Rights Reserved

  • In New Trial, Simpson Is Demure, but Unbowed

    Pool photo by Julie Jacobson

    Although O.J. Simpson, right, was acquitted in 1995 in the killings of his wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald Goldman, he later lost a civil suit and was ordered to pay $33.5 million to the estates of Ms. Simpson and Mr. Goldman.

     

    By 
    Published: May 15, 2013

    LAS VEGAS — His hands cuffed to his belt, his legs shackled, O.J. Simpson shuffled to the front of a courtroom here this morning after four years in prison, testifying in an effort to overturn the kidnapping and robbery conviction that sent him to state prison after he was acquitted of the double murder that made him notorious.

    Related

    Mr. Simpson cut a far different figure than he did during the “trial of a century” in Los Angeles in 1995 or as the American hero football player he had once been. At 65 – “nearing 66,” Mr. Simpson said, almost plaintively, his voice clearly audible across the small courtroom here — he is grayer, balder, slightly stooped and heavier.

    Yet in a morning of answering questions, Mr. Simpson was amiable and unruffled, smiling and even joking as he answered queries about the confrontation in a hotel room here four years ago that led to his conviction on robbery and kidnapping charges and a sentence of up to 33 years in prison.

    At one point, Mr. Simpson politely demurred when his attorney, Patricia Palm, offered to walk over to help Mr. Simpson pour a glass of water with the one hand that a court officer had unshackled after he took the witness stand. At another, he nodded when she asked him if he had his reading glasses as she walked over to show him a transcript.

    Mr. Simpson was once a symbol of spectacle, of an era of televised car chases and round-the-clock crushes of attention from the news media. No more. A dozen members of the public were waiting outside for a seat in the courtroom on the third floor of the Regional Justice Center, and a few were empty by midmorning. There were empty seats in the news media section as well, though the parking lot outside had its share of satellite trucks.

    Yet as Mr. Simpson recounted the story of the robbery — he said he was trying to peacefully reclaim at a hotel room some personal items stolen from him and put on the lucrative sports memorabilia market — he remarked on the outsized celebrity he has been, the object of polarized fascination since his transformation from a football star and Hertz pitchman to a man accused of the murder of his wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald Goldman, in Brentwood, an expensive Los Angeles neighborhood, in 1994.

    Even as he lives out of public sight, Mr. Simpson, a man who clearly continues to pay close attention to his newspaper clippings, remains a subject of what he suggested were wildly inflated accounts of his life.

    “I’ve spent the last four and a half years as the most uneventful four and half years of my life,” he said. “But I still get the headlines in the media. I’m getting married to a guy. I got cut up.”

    Mr. Simpson appeared to view his life’s decline with an almost dry wit. When he was asked about the $350,000 he paid to a lawyer who represented him in the original trial here — one of the grounds of the appeal is that his lawyers were incompetent — he just shrugged.

    “I thought it was kind of expensive,” he said. “But I’ve spent a lot of money on lawyers in the past. This was nothing.” But, he quickly added, “it meant more to me this time because it came out of my pension.”

    Although Mr. Simpson was acquitted in the killings, he lost a civil suit and was ordered to pay $33.5 million to the estates of Ms. Simpson and Mr. Goldman.

    On Wednesday, Mr. Simpson was, in effect, giving the testimony he never gave in his 2008 trial, when he was convicted of being one of a gang of men who barged into a hotel room and stole sports memorabilia, including many items that came from Mr. Simpson. He was convicted of kidnapping and robbery and sentenced to up to 33 years in jail.

    Mr. Simpson said that he had gone to the hotel room to retrieve his personal belongings, including signed footballs and what he had thought were family photographs, including one of him with J. Edgar Hoover, after an auction dealer he knew had alerted him that they were being sold. He said he had followed a lawyer’s advice who said it was legal to do that, as long as he did not trespass or use force.

    He said that upon entering, he was enraged to see one of his friends there who, he said, had stolen material from his home. And he said, despite testimony to the contrary at his earlier trial, there had been no discussion of using weapons in taking back his property.

    “It was my stuff,” Mr. Simpson said. “I followed what I thought was the law. I didn’t break into the room. I didn’t beat up anyone. I didn’t try to muscle anyone.”

    Ms. Palm asked Mr. Simpson repeatedly if he had been drinking in the days before that the robbery took place, one of the many grounds upon which Mr. Simpson is seeking a new trial. Mr. Simpson noted that he was in Las Vegas for a celebration, a friend’s wedding, and that he most certainly had been drinking.

    There was the “Bloody Mary, or two” for breakfast (he had slept in that morning, missing a golf game, after a heavy night of drinking the night before). That afternoon by the pool, he told a cocktail waitress that he was under doctor’s orders never to carry an empty glass, he said. Later, he and his compatriots met at a bar in preparation for going to the hotel room where his material was being held.

    So was he intoxicated?

    “I wouldn’t have gotten behind the wheel of a car,” he said. “I’m in Las Vegas! I’m in Las Vegas with a lot of friends. Yes, we were in a very celebrative mood.”

    After the confrontation at the hotel, Mr. Simpson joined friends for dinner at a Las Vegas restaurant. He told Ms. Palm that he suspected then he was in trouble — at least in the court of the tabloid media — even as he insisted that he never did anything wrong.

    “Here we go again: I’m going to need a bail bondsman,” he said, recalling what he said that night. “I’ve gone through a couple of incidents before I thought was nothing that the media ended up making a big deal. Here we go again. There’s no way this is not going to be made a big deal.

     

    Copyright. 2013 The New York Times Company All Rights Reserved