"Not another street circuit," was the dominant line of response on social media in the wake of F1's announcement that the Spanish GP would move away from its long-time home in Barcelona.
With Barcelona's future in limbo, from 2026 onwards the event will head to a new semi-street circuit in Madrid, located at the IFEMA fairgrounds close to its Barajas airport, much closer to the city centre than its Catalan counterpart.
The twisty track map, which features some purpose-built sections include a high-speed banked corner as well as a more typical stop-start street lay-out, did little to further inspire confidence among a growing number of disgruntled fans that feel F1 is starting to move away too much from their beloved traditional, permanent venues to less evocative city loops.
In recent years several street circuits have joined the calendar, including the likes of Baku, Jeddah and Las Vegas. Then there are urban or parkland circuits. Not technically street circuits, but located in such dense metropolitan areas that track designers are constrained by the cramped surroundings.
Miami is one, and Madrid will be too.
You could argue about some, but looking at this year's calendar, seven out of 24 venues can be classified as some form of street circuit: Jeddah, Melbourne, Miami, Monaco, Baku, Singapore and Las Vegas.
They all fit in Liberty Media's strategy of heading to vibrant 'destination' cities, making it easier for fans to access the venues using public transport and existing infrastructure, while also giving teams and sponsors more attractive hospitality options.
Source: Autosport