The brainchild of BBC Radio 2 Breakfast Show host Chris Evans, CarFest North 2016 marked the ninth edition of the family-friendly festival. The eight events held thus far have raised in excess of £6 million for BBC Children in Need, a figure that is set to rise significantly by the end of this year.
Bolesworth’s beautiful and capacious grounds provided a fitting backdrop to what has become one of the most well-loved and well-attended festivals on the calendar – with every CarFest to-date being a sell-out success.
CarFest North 2016, though, was extra-special and was indisputably the biggest and best yet, with more cars than ever before, countless manufacturers lending their support and some of the hottest – or should that be coolest – live music acts on the planet.
Multiple Formula 1 World Champions Red Bull Racing headlined the Track Sprint, as the title-winning RB7 – piloted by former Macau F3 Grand Prix winner António Félix da Costa and recently-crowned FIA Formula E Champion Sébastien Buemi – wowed onlookers with a series of high-speed runs along the hay bale-lined hill climb. Talking of legendary racing cars, there was also a 1993 Benetton-Ford B193B, in which Michael Schumacher won that season’s Portuguese Grand Prix.
The story of motoring was told via The Time Tunnel, as 40 iconic cars from down the decades went on display, from a classic turn-of-the-20th century Oldsmobile right up to the present day with a 2016 Tesla Model X from the pioneering American electric car manufacturer.
Other highlights included a 1913 Ford Model T – an example of the car that was generally regarded as the world’s first affordable automobile – a 1948 Series 1 Land Rover, a 1967 Ford Mustang Coupé and a homologated 1984 Audi Quattro. Not forgetting, of course, a 1982 DeLorean DMC-12 – think Marty McFly and ‘Back to the Future’ and you won’t be far wrong...
Throw in Chris Evans’ Famous Five, a Sporting Bears auction, the show-stopping Top Gear Stunt Team led by Paul Swift and smoke-spewing hot rods amongst a myriad of other automotive attractions, and petrol-heads were well catered for indeed over the weekend.
BBC Children in Need’s loveable mascot Pudsey Bear was much in evidence around the site, high-fiving enthusiastic festival-goers and cheerfully posing for photographs. Traditional favourites like ‘Britain’s Best’, meanwhile, were joined by welcome new additions including food fair demos with celebrity chefs Tom Kerridge and Rachel Allen, showjumping, camel racing, a sponsored rubber duck race and dancing workshops with TV stars Kevin, Karen and Joanne Clifton and Natalie Lowe.
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