Los Angeles County Raceway

Coordinates: 34°32′34″N 118°00′34″W / 34.542674°N 118.009577°W / 34.542674; -118.009577
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Los Angeles County Raceway

The official Los Angeles County Raceway logo

Facility statistics
Track name: Los Angeles County Raceway
Nicknames: LACR, the "Ice Rink", Palmdale Dragstrip
Location: 6850 East Avenue T, Palmdale, California 93550
Opened: October 1964. Formerly King’s
Antelope Valley Raceway and
Palmdale International Raceway.
Became Los Angeles County Raceway (LACR) in 1980.
Closed: Reputation
Owned by: Privately owned since 1964.
Sanctioning body: NHRA
Radio station: 91.9 FM
Main sponsors: Coors Light, NAPA Auto Parts
Dimensions
Track type: Dragstrip moto cross, Hollywood stunt school
Track elevation: 2,710 ft (830 m).
Track length: 1/4 mile (1320 ft), and a 1/2-mile shutoff area
Track width: 60 ft (18 m).
Pavement type: Asphalt and concrete
Seating capacity: Over 6,500
Timing system: Chrondek
Total land area: Over 60 acres
Parking lot area: 250,000 sq ft (23,000 m2).
Pit area and staging area: 600,000 sq ft (56,000 m2).

Los Angeles County Raceway (or "LACR") was a motorsport facility in Palmdale, California. LACR's main feature was its 1/4-mile dragstrip, which was first opened in 1964. LACR held its final event on July 29, 2007. The land under the track is owned by Granite Construction, Inc.

General information[edit]

Los Angeles County Raceway (LACR) was an NHRA-sanctioned quarter-mile drag strip located near East Avenue T and 70th Street east in Palmdale, California. LACR was home to many racing organizations such as SCEDA, NMRA, DHRA, ANRA, and practically every NHRA racing category. LACR was home to the annual Hangover Nationals, Fox Hunt, Rat Fink Party, and Toys for Tots. LACR was open every Wednesday and Friday night to any racer ranging from dragsters to street cars. LACR held its final race on the last weekend of July 2007, due to Granite Construction's ability to overtake the land they had leased to the raceway to use for mining.

Closing of LACR[edit]

LACR ceased operations on July 29, 2007. After 43 years, the mining company next door "Granite Construction", who leased the mineral rights to the property that was leased to LACR, shut down LACR in order for mining. Within 3 months of LACR closing its doors, every building on the property had been demolished, more than half the parking lot was mined, and no pavement remained.

In popular culture[edit]

  • Los Angeles County Raceway has been seen in numerous movies and television shows. Hollywood movies featuring LACR include The Fast and the Furious and Ocean's Eleven.
  • The Mariah Carey music video "Loverboy" was filmed at LACR.
  • Mass media corporation Primedia has many of its automotive magazines based in their Los Angeles branch. Because of LACR's closeness to Los Angeles, many of these publications use Los Angeles County Raceway to perform comparison tests and to record performance data. Some of the magazines that frequent LACR are: Hot Rod Magazine; Four Wheeler, Sport Truck, Turbo, Car Craft Magazine; Chevy High Performance; 5.0 Mustang Magazine; Mustang Monthly Magazine; and Motorcyclist Magazine (all of their 1/4-mile data are recorded at LACR). Although separate from Primedia, Car and Driver magazine also stages many of its comparison tests at Los Angeles County Raceway (acceleration data) as well as neighboring Willow Springs Raceway (handling data).
  • LACR's list of films, videos, television shows, and magazines that use Los Angeles County Raceway.[1]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]

34°32′34″N 118°00′34″W / 34.542674°N 118.009577°W / 34.542674; -118.009577