RE: Retro on the Riviera: PH Footnote

RE: Retro on the Riviera: PH Footnote

Wednesday 23rd May 2018

Retro on the Riviera: PH Footnote

The Monaco Grand Prix is overpriced and underwhelming. But there is another way...



It's Monaco Grand Prix week, meaning what is already the world's most densely populated country will be fit to burst as its 40,000 residents are joined by 200,000 race fans. Those visitors will pay for the privilege, too: on race day, even the cheapest seats in one of the rather basic grandstands cost £520, not to mention inflated flight and accommodation prices. That's quite an investment just to watch muted racing cars that are too wide and too powerful to allow proper racing on the tight Monégasque streets.

But there is another - and I think better - way to experience this glamorous, storied racing Mecca on the Côte d'Azur. Make your travel arrangements for a fortnight earlier and you're in for a much bigger treat at a fraction of the cost. Every two years, the Grand Prix de Monaco Historique precedes the Formula 1 circus, and from 11-13 May I was there to enjoy it. This year's visit was my fourth, and I'm more convinced than ever it is one of the world's best motorsport events.


Forget the calculated homogeny of F1 hardware in 2018. This year's GP Historique featured an immense variety of more than 170 Grand Prix cars, from the petite, pale blue 1925 Bugatti 35 to ground effect cars such as the 1980 Williams FW07B and everything in between, plus a helping of characterful and stylish 1950s sports cars for good measure. There were seven classes, each of which got a 30-minute practice on Friday, 25 minutes of qualifying on Saturday and then a race of between 10 and 18 laps on Sunday. No shortage of action, then.

But I'm a road car fan first and foremost; so before the motorsport, a visit to the preview of RM Sotheby's auction at the seafront Grimaldi Forum conference centre, a 10-minute walk from Casino Square, seemed appropriate. It's one of three major Monaco auctions timed to coincide with the GP Historique.


With even the kiddies cars bringing a low estimate of around ten grand, I wasn't there to buy (the 70 per cent-size Gold Leaf Lotus Elan was quite lovely, mind you), but it was a rare opportunity to see some very special cars up close. The headline lot was a 1957 Ferrari 250 'Tour de France', estimated to make €7m-€9m. Surely one of the most graceful endurance racers of all time, it was beautifully presented, only the weathered and cracked Cavallino badge on each flank allowed to recall its age and extensive competition history.

My main interest lay with other Italians, though, including a pair of Alfa Romeos by Bertone - a 1959 Giulietta Sprint Speciale and 1965 Giulia Sprint Speciale, both of which took cues from Alfa's madcap BAT series of acutely aerodynamic concepts - a devastatingly handsome 1955 Lancia Aurelia B24S Spider America by Pininfarina, a 1954 V8-engined Fiat Coupé by Vignale and the cleanest Lancia Delta Integrale Evo I've ever seen, a 1992 Verde York edition. The likes of Aston Martin, BMW, Jaguar and Porsche were also well represented; so much glorious metal in one uncrowded room.


The 250 TdF didn't sell (neither did the daringly two-tone Ferrari 458 Spider-based Sergio by Pininfarina), but most lots did, collecting a total of €23.3m. A stupendous €1.2m bought a 1973 Porsche 911 Carrera 2.7 Lightweight, while €809,375 went to charity for the Pope's Lamborghini Huracán. See the full results here.

Saturday afternoon was spent in the grandstand opposite the famous swimming pool, its shimmering blue volume cruelly empty as we sweltered in our seats. Goodness knows how hot it must have been for the drivers - a mix of owners and those talented enough to be offered a seat - but it gave us a chance to familiarise with some of the cars ahead of race day. For me, qualifying's highlight was Michael Lyons in his 1977 Penthouse-Rizla Hesketh 308E, attacking the course - and his competitors - without much in the way of mercy for his car's screaming Cosworth DFV.


It was blessedly cooler on Sunday, when our grandstand perch at Tabac corner let us track the cars over a generous stretch from just after the tunnel all the way to the swimming pool, plus an over-the-shoulder glance as they blasted uphill from Sainte Devote.

Race one was won pretty easily by Irishman Paddins Dowling in the famous 1936 ERA R5B, 'Remus', originally raced by Prince Bira of Siam for his White Mouse team and winner of the 1936 Grand Prix at Albi. Like many of the cars competing, its intriguing backstory was half the appeal.

I'd most been looking forward to the second race of the day, which was for F1 cars from between 1961 and 1965, and it delivered brilliantly. In Lotus's 70th year, it was fittingly the most populous marque on the grid, and equally apt that in the 50th year since Jim Clark's death, one of the svelte, green and yellow Lotus 25s that carried him to the 1963 World Championship was on pole.


Serial classic Lotus racer Andy Middlehurst was at the 25's controls, but despite qualifying 2.5sec in front and being no stranger to winning in Monaco, he spent most of the race barely clinging on to the lead from Joseph Colasacco in the 1964 ex-Surtees Ferrari 1512. Seeing and hearing these howling cigars chase each other around the harbour's edge was my highlight of the weekend, Coventry Climax V8 and Ferrari flat 12 wrung out as the drivers hunted for grip and fought for track position. In the end, it was a win for Middlehurst - by a mere 0.6sec. It was an even closer thing in the 1966-1972 F1 race, the hammer-headed March 711 winning from the ex-Denny Hulme, Yardley-liveried McLaren M19A by less than 0.4sec.

There were cars I'd seen before, cars I hadn't, and cars I'd forgotten all about, each one oozing the character so painfully absent from their contemporary counterparts. Was the level of skill on show up there with that of modern F1 drivers? No, not really. But as entertainment, I'd choose the GP Historique every time.


The practicalities stack up, too. Only 40,000 people attend the event, so overcrowding isn't an issue. During a Sunday downpour we dived into a café, found a seat and watched the racing on TV over drinks: ideal. As for the cost, entry to the stands (and to the RM Sotheby's auction preview) was free on the Friday. Saturday tickets cost £26 and it was £44 on Sunday, or £53 the pair. We paid £120 for flights to Nice, £83 each to share a hotel room in delightful Beaulieu-sur-Mer, and about a fiver on the 10-minute train ride into Monaco. You can take more expensive trips to Homebase.

 

 

Richard Webber

[Auction images: RM Sotheby's]

 

Author
Discussion

tyrrell

Original Poster:

1,670 posts

208 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
Well I will be there in 2020 on the strength of this article, sounds fantastic cool

LaurasOtherHalf

21,429 posts

196 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
Is it tradition that decrees Pistonheads main page articles must have at least two paragraphs dedicated to a certain car/car’s feature and NOT contain an image of whatever the author is writing about?

C’mon editors!

Other than that, looks like a brilliant trip. Can’t agree on the Monaco F1 bashing though, it’s one of the most amazing events to attend for any petrolhead. Casino Square on Saturday and Swimming Pool/Pits on Sunday for us this year smile


stuthemong

2,275 posts

217 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
Fantastic article, wish you'd posted your plans before you went, now I've got to wait two years!!!

PH heaven

Oz83

688 posts

139 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
I also went this year. Popped down on Friday for the free entrance. We had our 2 year old with us and we weren't sure how long she would sit still for :-) Unfortunately the miserable marshals at Casino wouldn't let us in with a fold up push chair. Thankfully they had pram parking at Anthony Nogues so we enjoyed an hour or so there.

Having watched the Hybrid/turbo F1 cars in Monaco a few years back and being a little underwhelmed, all I can say this time is 'the noise'! You don't so much as hear these cars, you feel them. I can only imagine what a full grid must have been like back in the day. Even our little one with her ear defenders on said it 'tickled' as a Ferrari flat 12 disappeared down the straight.

Well worth a trip.

Krikkit

26,527 posts

181 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
tyrrell said:
Well I will be there in 2020 on the strength of this article, sounds fantastic cool
Me too!

BricktopST205

900 posts

134 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
Silverstone classic is pretty much the UK version of this. We are going this summer and giving F1 a wide birth. A hell of a lot cheaper than a GP weekend and a hell of a lot more fun. It is a shame when the modern era of Motorsport has become so boring to watch compared to the classic!

Edited by BricktopST205 on Tuesday 22 May 09:22

simonrockman

6,852 posts

255 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
Looks fantastic, but then so is the Grand Prix, my wife, who had no interested in motorsport said our trip to the Monaco Grand Pix (as guests of Vodafone, in its first year of Ferrari sponsorship) was the best thing we ever did - better than our honeymoon.


spikyone

1,452 posts

100 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
I was there in 2010, up at Casino Square. Watching those old ERAs being hustled through there - and even better, hearing them - was absolutely staggering. I have no end of respect for drivers with the skill to push those cars to their limits around a circuit like Monaco. Even the F3 races delivered entertainment and variety far in excess of most Monaco F1 races of the past 30 years, whilst giving me a new appreciation of Emanuele Pirro! It wasn't just single-seaters either, with one of the races for gorgeous historic sports cars.

I don't know why I never made a return trip, but 2020 is certainly tempting. I'd highly recommend it to anyone with even a passing interest.

365daytonafan

283 posts

185 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
Grandstand tickets for the Grand prix are expensive, but the basic Sector Rocher tickets for the hill beneath the palace are less than Silverstone general admission. Get there early and find the right spot and you can see the circuit from the tunnel exit all the way to Anthony Noghes and there is a great view of the pit lane too.

Also accomodation is a lot cheaper if you go a bit further down the French or Italian coasts and then get the train which can take you right into Monaco.

Overall it is a much better F1 experience than Silverstone.

The historics are great too btw.

toothy1911

10 posts

120 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
I went this year too! First time for me. Sat in the same grandstand opposite swimming pool on Saturday too.
Fabulous weekend. Used it as an excuse to do a tour around rest of Europe on the way back.

poosemon

234 posts

199 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
365daytonafan said:
Grandstand tickets for the Grand prix are expensive, but the basic Sector Rocher tickets for the hill beneath the palace are less than Silverstone general admission. Get there early and find the right spot and you can see the circuit from the tunnel exit all the way to Anthony Noghes and there is a great view of the pit lane too.

Also accomodation is a lot cheaper if you go a bit further down the French or Italian coasts and then get the train which can take you right into Monaco.

Overall it is a much better F1 experience than Silverstone.

The historics are great too btw.
Having been to both for F1, wouldn't be in a rush to Monaco again (although the classics in the article has definitely perked my interest..). Was great to see the spectacle of it, but Sector Rocher wasnt a massively pleasant experience. We did get there early, managed to get our own space etc but was extremely congested, people around doing stupid things chopping down bushes, hanging from trees, lots of people trying to move around to get to loos etc which was difficult. Getting train home was a bit of a mare too, that was leaving in the early evening as stayed in Monaco to walk the track and the town after the race but massive queues. We were aware that this was going to be the case before going but options for viewing restricted due to budget....

Silverstone general admission was a doddle in comparison. Favourite so far is definitely Spa though smile

Re Monaco GP, did manage to combine it in a nice holiday though (stayed in Vence and got the train from Cagnes Sur Mer), so got to drive through Monaco a few days after (watch out the the motorbike stands which definitely arent on some of the apexes in the f1 wink ), and also went up into the mountains to drive Col de Turini, Col de bonnette etc on another day so can make a good holiday around it!


Helicopter123

8,831 posts

156 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
Bet some of those are a handful in the wet!

PistonBroker

2,419 posts

226 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
I bumped into a client on the Thursday and he mentioned he was heading out for this the next day. First time it was on my radar. Then I saw on Twitter that Quest were showing it and that was 4 hours of my Sunday afternoon sorted. I'm sure Mrs PB had thoughts about gardening or something, but so be it!

I'd already mentally added it to the bucket list, but with numbers like that at the end of the article it looks like it could be sooner rather than later. Great piece.

Lotusgone

1,188 posts

127 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
toothy1911 said:
I went this year too! First time for me. Sat in the same grandstand opposite swimming pool on Saturday too.
Fabulous weekend. Used it as an excuse to do a tour around rest of Europe on the way back.
Spooky. I was also there for the first time, in the N grandstand facing the pool on Saturday...and on Tabac on the Sunday.

Everything the OP says is endorsed 100%. Hotels are cheaper in Nice, local buses are €1.50 to and from the airport and even all the way to Monaco (on the Sunday morning when SNCF was on strike). You're never far away from another enthusiast, loads of whom are Brits/English speakers. You also get a full race programme plus parades.


MrGeoff

650 posts

172 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
Oz83 said:
I also went this year. Popped down on Friday for the free entrance. We had our 2 year old with us and we weren't sure how long she would sit still for :-) Unfortunately the miserable marshals at Casino wouldn't let us in with a fold up push chair. Thankfully they had pram parking at Anthony Nogues so we enjoyed an hour or so there.

Having watched the Hybrid/turbo F1 cars in Monaco a few years back and being a little underwhelmed, all I can say this time is 'the noise'! You don't so much as hear these cars, you feel them. I can only imagine what a full grid must have been like back in the day. Even our little one with her ear defenders on said it 'tickled' as a Ferrari flat 12 disappeared down the straight.

Well worth a trip.
Interesting you took your two year old. I couldn't go this year as I have a one month old but next time this rolls around he'll be 2 years old. Did your daughter enjoy it?

Lockhouse

262 posts

199 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
I've been to tbe last two. A top weekend.

LIVENT

196 posts

228 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
It is indeed a brilliant event, I would also recommend on the years the historic race does not happen going to the FIA Formula E race which is there when the historic race is not. It's true the cars sound like hair dyers but they do overtake crash and race, which is more than can be said about the Formula 1 procession. It's also a great party atmosphere and does not cost you a kidney to go.

Nerdherder

1,773 posts

97 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
10/10. More of this please.

marshall100

1,124 posts

201 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
Watched the coverage on Quest and it was superb, I reckon it's fsar better value all round than the modern offering. The racing was decent too. What's not to like.

Gandahar

9,600 posts

128 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
quotequote all
Without reading the article to it's non real racing end...

GO TO LE MANS?
GO TO PIKES PEAK?

Le Mans is Epic
Pikes peak is epic.


Both are coming up. Both are far far better than Monaco which is just a race nowadays for the rich to get their instaphotogramBonusPrint to be taken whilst knowing sweet fanny adams.

There is a certain american race that lasts 500 laps that stz all over Monaco on this weekend. Maybe some overtaking? angel Plus some old stuff for the people in the know. Sham.

Ok, perhaps harsh, but when you have Le Mans and Indy 500 and Pikes peak in the same time frame as Monaco then it is a hard sell.

The F1 race there, the climax, not the Coventry one, of the weekend, will be not very special I think.

Baku is now a more exciting street race than Monaco smile

Edited by Gandahar on Tuesday 22 May 20:37