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Nascar24rainbow
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With a proposal for NASCAR racing at the Meadowlands making little headway, a developer is pushing to build a race track in Linden, in an industrial section off the New Jersey Turnpike. Liberty Speedway at Linden would include a 100,000-seat grandstand -- expandable to 140,000 seats -- a .92-mile speedway in accordance with NASCAR regulations, a 400,000-square-foot entertainment center and a 20-story hotel and conference center, said developer Morton Salkind, who has included a number of celebrities and politically connected people on the project. Among them are actor and race car driver Paul Newman, race car driver Mario Andretti and political operative James Carville. If built -- significant hurdles remain -- the track would be the only NASCAR facility in the North Jersey-New York metropolitan area, a lucrative market for a sport that is second only to football in television viewership. If the proposal sounds familiar to racing fans, it is. Salkind, a former state assemblyman, submitted a similar plan last fall for the Meadowlands complex in East Rutherford. While that proposal is technically still on the table, Salkind said the Linden site has more advantages. Salkind's case was not helped by the fact that the Meadowlands Commission was more interested in a proposal submitted by International Speedway Corp. But the ISC plan appears to be stumbling because it required hundreds of millions of dollars in state funding. Local concerns over noise from the track didn't help matters, either. Salkind's race track, hotel and virtual reality entertainment center would be built on a 140-acre site off the Arthur Kill, on the old GAF property in the Tremley Point section of Linden. He recently took his $401 million proposal to the Linden City Council, members of which have wanted to see the aging industrial area redeveloped for years. The project would be privately funded and not require any subsidy from the city. In addition to reaching an agreement on the purchase price for the Tremley Point property, there is a problem with NASCAR itself. "All of our dates are taken," spokesman James Hunter said. "We just could not put any races down on that track." But Salkind said he was sure an arrangement could be reached with NASCAR. "They'll make open dates for the New York metropolitan market," he said. "They have reserve dates for themselves, which they can share. They'll give us the dates happily." The closest NASCAR tracks to New Jersey are Watkins Glen, Pocono Raceway and Dover International Speedway. If this track becomes a reality, racing will have come full circle in New Jersey. In 1954, one of the earliest Grand National races was held on the grounds of Linden Airport, which had a two-mile road course.(Newark Star Ledger)
I hope this track gets approved. It will be great to get the Winston Cup cars back in New Jersey. And finally someone realized that tha fans do not like the cookie-cutter tracks, but they do love short-tracks.
I hope this track gets approved. It will be great to get the Winston Cup cars back in New Jersey. And finally someone realized that tha fans do not like the cookie-cutter tracks, but they do love short-tracks.