Goodwood to spotlight F1 engineering icons at 2025 Festival of Speed
Adrian Newey, Gordon Murray and Ross Brawn — all major forces behind Formula One's evolution — will be central figures at the event taking place from July 10 to 13.
The festival's F1 tribute is structured around six storytelling pillars — prologue, pioneers, innovators, underdogs, champions and teams — with each tracing a different chapter in the sport's development.
The innovators section, curated in part by Newey, will focus on those who've pushed engineering boundaries and redefined race car design.
Newey, now with Aston Martin after his tenure at Red Bull, has been a dominant figure in the sport for close to 40 years. His career includes more than 220 Grand Prix wins and 26 world titles with multiple teams. He'll bring two personal cars to Goodwood — a Lotus 49, the machine that sparked his interest in motorsport, and a Leyton House CG901, a car he designed for the 1990 season that introduced several technical innovations.
Joining him is Prof Gordon Murray, the South African-born designer whose career began at Brabham in 1969. He quickly made his mark with designs such as the controversial BT46B 'Fan Car' and later joined McLaren during its late 1980s dominance with drivers such as Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost. Murray eventually moved into road car design, creating the McLaren F1 and later launching his own company, Gordon Murray Automotive.
His firm is the featured marque at this year's festival, with a centrepiece display in front of Goodwood House and a collection of landmark vehicles spanning Murray's 60-year career.
Also in the spotlight is Ross Brawn, who led some of the most successful technical operations in F1 history. He guided Michael Schumacher to seven world titles and famously spearheaded the Brawn GP fairytale run in 2009, when the newly formed team won the drivers' and constructors' championships in its only season. Brawn will showcase the 2009 BGP 001 at Goodwood — a car that set the cat among the pigeons.
After selling his team to Mercedes, Brawn remained as team principal and laid the groundwork for the manufacturer's dominant era from 2014 to 2021. More recently he served as F1's MD of Motorsport, overseeing regulatory reforms and a push towards sustainability.
The Festival of Speed's F1 celebration will also include more than 100 significant Grand Prix cars, with appearances by eight former world champions, including Alain Prost, Mario Andretti and Nigel Mansell.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The South African
14 hours ago
- The South African
Oscar Piastri to have Australian Grand Prix grandstand named after him
Oscar Piastri will have a grandstand named after him at the Australian Grand Prix from next year, an honour the McLaren driver said was 'surreal'. The Piastri Grandstand will sit opposite the pit lane at the Albert Park circuit in Melbourne, the home race of 24-year-old Piastri. 'It is pretty surreal, it still feels weird racing at home – it is very cool racing at home,' the world championship leader said on social media. Other notable drivers with stands at Albert Park include Jack Brabham, Arthur Waite, Alan Jones, Daniel Ricciardo and Mark Webber. Piastri currently tops the drivers' standings with 284 points, narrowly ahead of McLaren team-mate Lando Norris, with 10 grands prix left in this campaign. Australia hosts the first race of next season. The naming of a grandstand is an honour typically reserved for sporting legends with a long line of achievements. Former F1 driver Webber said it was a reflection of Piastri's promising results so far as he pursues a first world crown. 'Clearly he is very comfortable at the elite level and making his presence felt, which is brilliant, and representing Australia in the way that the country likes to be represented,' he said in a statement. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

The Herald
14 hours ago
- The Herald
Somebody just blew R458m on a Ferrari Daytona SP3
For the first time, Ferrari has applied a full-length logotype across the upper body, also in Giallo Modena. The cabin continues the bespoke theme with an innovative fabric made from recycled tyres, decorated with Prancing Horse motifs. The dashboard and steering column are crafted from the same lightweight carbon fibre used in Formula One, underscoring the car's racing DNA. At its heart is a 6.5 l naturally aspirated V12 producing 618kW and 697Nm of torque. The car is designated '599+1', signifying it as an extra addition to the sold-out 599-unit Daytona SP3 production run. A bespoke plaque confirms its unique status. All proceeds from the sale will go to The Ferrari Foundation in support of educational initiatives. Recent projects include a partnership with Save the Children to help rebuild the Aveson Charter School in Altadena, California, after it was destroyed by the Eaton wildfire earlier this year.

TimesLIVE
a day ago
- TimesLIVE
Piastri gets his own grandstand for 2026 Australian Grand Prix
Formula One leader Oscar Piastri will have a grandstand named after him at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix next year, by which time the McLaren driver could be returning home as world champion. The Melbourne-born 24-year-old, who has not made the Albert Park podium in three attempts, leads British teammate Lando Norris by nine points after 14 of the season's 24 rounds. Piastri has already won more races in a season than any other Australian driver since the world championship started in 1950, with six so far this year, with three second places. 'It feels surreal and I never thought this would happen, but the support is incredible and I can't wait to see it come together next March,' he said in an Australian Grand Prix statement. The stand will be on the main straight, opposite the pit lane, with the existing Fangio grandstand expanded and sectioned in two. Champions Jack Brabham and Alan Jones, with retired F1 drivers Mark Webber and Daniel Ricciardo, also have stands named after them.