Road racing can be a term involving road running, road bicycle races, or automobile races. As contemplated in this article, the term will be treated as it relates to motorsport, specifically, automobile racing and motorcycle racing.
Alternatively, road races can be conducted on purpose-built race tracks that, due to their irregular shapes and many turns and curves, resemble true road courses. Due to safety and insurance concerns, this style of racing has largely supplanted true road racing, particularly in Europe. In the USA, road racing is also occasionally conducted using the infield and oval portions of tracks, such as the 24 Hours of Daytona. Road Racing has been featured in many video games.
Other less famous purpose-built road course include: Barber Motorsports Park, Miller Motorsports Park, Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Heartland Park Topeka, Lime Rock Park, Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, and Road Atlanta. Additionally, Grand Prix-style road course racing over public streets is making something of a comeback; the most famous race of this sort currently held is the one hosted annually in Long Beach, California. Other famous street circuits in North America include events held in St. Petersburg, Florida, Vancouver, Canada, and Toronto, Canada. Airport runways figure into several part-time road courses in North America: Burke Lakefront Airport in Cleveland, Ohio hosts a Champ Car race every summer; the St. Petersburg course uses the runway of a small airport as its main straight, and Sebring Raceway, home of the prestigious 12-hour race in March, was formerly a military airfield in Sebring, Florida.
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