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State Fairgrounds Speedway: Raleigh: North Carolina: 0.500 miles (0.805 km) black dirt 1955-1970 NASCAR Cup Series (1955, 1969-1970) Smoky Mountain Speedway: Maryville: Tennessee: 0.400 miles (0.644 km) clay 1964 NASCAR Cup Series (1965-1971) Tri-State Speedway: Haubstadt: Indiana: 0.400 miles (0.644 km) clay 1957 World of Outlaws: Volusia ...
Oval: Ona Speedway (West Virginia International Speedway) Ona West Virginia: 1977: Asphalt: 0.438 miles (0.705 km) ... Magic Valley Speedway: Idaho Twin Falls: 0.333 ...
The Calder Park Thunderdome in Melbourne, Australia, is also an example of a quad-oval speedway, though since its opening in 1987 it has generally been referred to as a tri-oval. The Rockingham Speedway is a special case because it can be interpreted as a D-oval as well as a tri-oval or quad-oval. The front line is laid out as an asymmetrical ...
Kentucky Speedway: Oval Anti-clockwise Sparta, Kentucky: 1.480 mi (2.382 km) Kentucky Grand Prix: Belterra Resort Indy 300 (2000–2001), Belterra Casino Indy 300 (2002–2004), AMBER Alert Portal Indy 300 (2005), Meijer Indy 300 (2006–2009), Kentucky Indy 300 (2010–2011) 2000–2011 12 Las Vegas Motor Speedway: Oval Anti-clockwise
Kevin Harvick's Kern Raceway (formerly Kern County Raceway Park) is a 0.500 mi (0.805 km) oval speedway located on CA 43 (Enos Lane) just off Interstate 5 in Bakersfield, Kern County, California, United States. Opened in 2013, it was built as a replacement for Mesa Marin Raceway.
It opened on March 27, 1999, under the official name Irwindale Speedway. Toyota purchased the naming rights to the facility in 2008, and from that time until 2011 it was also known as the Toyota Speedway at Irwindale. [1] The speedway featured banked, paved 1 ⁄ 2 - and 1 ⁄ 3-mile oval tracks and a 1 ⁄ 8-mile drag strip.
A 2.1-mile (3.4-km) road course was laid out in the parking lots surrounding the oval, and used for sports car racing between 1955 and 1969. [3] [4] It hosted a SCCA National Sports Car Championship round in 1955.
Willow Springs hosted two NASCAR Grand National Series races in 1956 and 1957 on the original road course (then known simply as Willow Springs Speedway), won by Chuck Stevenson and Marvin Panch, respectively. [3] The track also hosted five NASCAR Winston West Series events, the first two in 1955 and 1956 and the other three between 1984 and 1986.