Behind the Scenes at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya
- Categories Sports Management
- Date 13 de April de 2026
The Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya has hosted Formula 1 grands prix, MotoGP races, and some of the most technically demanding motorsport events in the world. Getting inside it, not as a spectator but as a professional in training, is a different experience entirely.
That is exactly what students on ESEI’s Master in Sports Management did recently, as part of the Events and Facilities Management course led by Professor Julia Roca Valverde. The visit was organised as a structured learning walk, designed to give students a first-hand understanding of how a world-class motorsport facility actually operates.
More Than a Tour
The learning walk took students through several areas of the circuit that the general public never sees. Race Direction, the Briefing Room, the Pre-Podium area, the Podium itself, the Media Centre, and the Paddock were all part of the route.
Each stop was chosen deliberately. Together, they map out the operational anatomy of a major racing event: where decisions are made, where competitors are briefed, where the media tell the story to the world, and where the ceremonial moments that fans remember are brought to life.
Walking through those spaces with an understanding of event management, rather than simply as a visitor, changes how you read them. The Briefing Room is not just a room with chairs. It is where race officials communicate critical safety information to drivers and team representatives before every session. The Media Centre is not just a workspace. It is a carefully managed communications operation running in parallel to the event itself. Seeing these functions laid out in a real venue makes the theory click in a way that no classroom session can fully replicate.
Understanding Event Management at Scale
One of the central learning outcomes of the visit was understanding the organisational complexity required to run an international racing circuit, not just on race weekend but year-round.
Events at this level involve hundreds of moving parts: safety coordination across the entire track, communication protocols between race control and marshals, logistics for teams and media, and the management of everything from catering to credential systems. What students were observing was not just an impressive building but a fully integrated event operation, one that has been refined over decades of hosting some of the most scrutinised sporting events on the planet.
For students studying event management and facilities management, that context is invaluable. It raises the standard of what they are working towards and gives them a concrete reference point when they begin working in the industry.
Safety, Communication and the Human Side of Racing
The visit also gave students insight into two areas that are easy to underestimate from the outside: safety coordination and communication processes.
Motorsport operates within extraordinarily precise safety frameworks. Race Direction is responsible for monitoring every aspect of a session in real time, making rapid decisions that can affect the outcome of a race and, more importantly, the safety of everyone on and around the track. Understanding how that function is staffed, structured and operated gives students a perspective on safety management that goes well beyond standard event planning.
The communication dimension is equally rich. A racing circuit during an event is a network of constant, layered communication: between race control and officials, between teams and their drivers, between the circuit and the media. Seeing how those channels are organised, and how the physical infrastructure of the venue supports them, is a genuinely educational experience for anyone working towards a career in sports event management.
Barcelona as a Classroom
ESEI’s approach to learning has always been grounded in the belief that real environments teach things that lecture rooms cannot. Barcelona makes that philosophy easy to put into practice. The city is home to world-class sporting infrastructure, and the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya is one of the finest examples.
For students on the Master in Sports Management, visits like this one are not extras added to the curriculum. They are central to it. The goal is to produce graduates who understand how major sporting events actually work, who have stood in the spaces where those events happen, and who can bring that practical knowledge into their professional lives from day one.
The Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya delivered exactly that. It is the kind of experience that stays with you long after the visit ends and that will come back to you every time you watch a race, plan an event, or walk into a major sporting venue for the first time in a professional capacity.
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