24 Hours of Barcelona

24 Hours of Barcelona
24H Series
VenueCircuit de Barcelona-Catalunya
First race1998
First 24H GT race2011
Last race2024
Duration24 Hours
Most wins (manufacturer) SEAT (5)
Porsche (5)

The 24 Hours of Barcelona (Spanish: 24 Horas de Barcelona) is an endurance motor race held annually in September at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya since 1998. It is considered to be the most important endurance event in Spain and since 2011 it has been co-organized by Creventic, the Dutch company that organizes the 24H Series.[1]

Winners

Year Drivers Car Team Remarks
1998 Francesc Gutiérrez
Javier Buch
Pau Romero
Santiago Puig
BMW M3 Gamace MC Competició 918 laps. First running of the event. National circuit layout.
1999 Albert Roquet
Lluís Umbert
Ramón Naqui
Pasqual Germán
Honda Civic Escudería GM-R 881 laps.
2000 Carles Villarrubí
Joaquim Folch
Jordi Gené
Jordi Serra
Volkswagen Golf Superwagen Philips 1 598 laps. Run on the newly reconfigured Grand Prix Circuit layout.
2001 Carlos Palau
Carles Villarrubí
Joaquim Folch
Jordi Gené
Volkswagen Golf RACC 589 laps.
2002 Anselm Llovera
Enric Codony
Jordi Codony
Òscar Nogués
Clio RS 2.0 16V Team Codony Sport 610 laps.
2003 Anselm Llovera
Enric Codony
Jordi Codony
Òscar Nogués
Clio RS 2.0 16V Team Codony Sport 595 laps.
2004 Jordi Nogués
Òscar Nogués
Sergi Ruiz
Clio RS 2.0 16V Pujolar Racing Volimes Sintec 625 laps. 2004 Grand Prix layout.
2005 Luis Pérez-Sala
Manel Cerqueda Jr.
Manel Cerqueda Sr.
Marcel Costa
Seat León Cupra-R (MK1) Baporo Motorsport Nostrum 643 laps.
2006 Alfredo Palencia
Antonio Puig
Eduardo Balcázar
SEAT León Supercopa (MK2) Zener Racing Team 644 laps.
2007 Albert Vilanova
Cristian Cano
Dani Vilanova
SEAT León Supercopa (MK2) Gevicar 616 laps. 2007 Grand Prix layout.
2008 Alfredo Palencia
Antonio Puig
Eduardo Balcázar
Francesc Gutiérrez
SEAT León Supercopa (MK2) Zener Racing Team 638 laps.
2009 Borja Veiga
Ferrán Monje
Manuel Sáez Merino Jr.
Òscar Nogués
SEAT León Supercopa (MK2) Sunred Seven 649 laps. Òscar Nogués wins a record four races.
2010 Race cancelled
2011 Edward Sandtröm
Lars Stugemo
Michael Outzen
Peter Posavac
BMW Z4 GT3 Schubert Motorsport 669 laps. First event organized by Creventic.
2012 Adam Christodoulou
Klaas Hummel
Phil Quaife
Tim Mullen
McLaren MP4-12C GT3 Lapidus Racing 640 laps.
2013 Christiaan Frankenhou
Kenneth Heyer
Michael Kroll
Roland Eggimann
Mercedes SLS AMG Hofor Racing 605 laps.
2014 Jaromir Jirík
Jiří Písařík
Matteo Malucelli
Peter Kox
Ferrari 458 GT3 Scuderia Praha 653 laps.
2015 Bernd Schneider
Hari Proczyk
Reinhold Renger
Sean Johnston
Mercedes SLS AMG HP Racing 662 laps.
2016 Alfred Renauer
Daniel Allemann
Ralf Bohn
Robert Renauer
Porsche 911 GT3 R Precote Herberth Motorsport 662 laps.
2017 Iván Pareras
Marc de Fulgencio
Maxime Guillemat
Nikolay Dmitriev
Nil Montserrat
Ginetta G55 GT4 NM Racing Team 643 laps.
2018 Alfred Renauer
Daniel Allemann
Ralf Bohn
Matt Campbell
Porsche 911 GT3 R Herberth Motorsport 677 laps.[2]
2019 Adrian Amstutz
Dennis Lind
Leonid Machitski
Patrick Kujala
Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Barwell Motorsport 690 laps.[3]
2020 Race cancelled
2021 Alfred Renauer
Daniel Allemann
Ralf Bohn
Robert Renauer
Porsche 911 GT3 R Herberth Motorsport 695 laps. 2021 Grand Prix Layout. Herbeth Motorsport sets record for wins.
2022 Daniel Keilwitz
George Weiss
Indy Dontje
Leonard Weiss
Nicolás Varrone
Ferrari 488 GT3 WTM Racing 696 laps.
2023 Julien Andlauer
Grégory Guilvert
Laurent Hurgon
Simon Tirman
Porsche 911 GT3 R (992) IMSA LS Group Performance 725 laps.
2024 Scott Noble
Ralf Bohn
Jason Hart
Dustin Blattner
Porsche 911 GT3 R (992) Herberth Motorsport 738 laps. Ralf Bohn ties the record for most wins as a driver. Current lap record on Grand Prix layouts.

References

  1. ^ 24 hours in memory of Fermín Vélez
  2. ^ "Hankook 24H BARCELONA 2018 24H GT Series and 24H TCE Series - Race Final results" (PDF). getraceresults.com. Sep 9, 2018. Archived from the original (PDF) on Jan 8, 2025. Retrieved Jan 8, 2025.
  3. ^ "21st Hankook 24H BARCELONA 2019 Race Final Results" (PDF). getraceresults.com. Sep 1, 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on Jan 8, 2025. Retrieved Jan 8, 2025.