Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

Super-Secret Volkswagen Test Track

Wednesday, 21st March 2007 by Alex

The BBC’s Top Gear program recently took the Bugatti Veyron for a quick test drive — a very quick test drive1. James May was asked to test the car’s top speed, and there was apparently only one place in the world it could be done — Volkswagen’s super-secret test facility in Germany, Ehra-Lessien.

Why? Because Ehra-Lessien has an unbroken straight 9 kilometres in length, which you can see running along the top of our thumbnails. It’s so long, that if you stood on one side of the straight, you wouldn’t be able to see the other end due to the curvature of the Earth. Seriously, this straight is enormous. One or two thumbnails just couldn’t do it justice, so we’ll do it in two parts. Here’s the northern end

…and then we have to skip a couple of thumbnails before we get to the southern end!

There’s several cars visible on the straight, including one that seems to be going really very fast.

reallyfastcar.jpg

There’s also a small blob — which is either some kind of bug on the image, or a very strange new kind of concept-tractor.

Anyway, while May couldn’t get the Veyron up to its theoretical top speed, he did manage to equal the fastest speed of any production road car, reaching an almost incomprehensible 253 miles, or 407 kilometres per hour2 on this very straight. You can watch the clip on Google Video to really get a feel for how fast that is.

Thanks to Top Gear.


  1. For those of you may not have heard of Bugatti’s supercar, all you need to know is that it’s currently the fastest, most powerful, and most expensive street-legal production car in the world, and that it has a theoretical top speed of 257 miles, or 414 kilometres per hour. 

  2. That’s 113 metres per second

22 Responses to 'Super-Secret Volkswagen Test Track'

  1. 1. fuzzbox says:

    Why not use the Bonneville Salt Flats? Isn’t that bigger? Or was it that they needed a Europe Location?

  2. 2. Steve in Abq says:

    Come on out to New Mexico for your test drives, boys — the freeway’s straight most of the way to Texas, and it’s all downhill. Even the semis easily get up to 130 km/h or more.

  3. 3. Parker (also in ABQ) says:

    Steve: True, true. Although legality might be an issue when doing 250+ mph on a public highway, any public highway. Even I-40, in the middle of nowhere. Those “safety corridors” will get you every time. :-)

  4. 4. Indigo says:

    That is a great find! Dugg.

  5. 5. cookie monster says:

    I have visions of all the big cheeses at Volkswagen hurriedly rushing to VW HQ right now for a crisis meeting.
    “Scheisse! Those bloody Google SightSeeing swines have discovered our secret test track! We must find a new one immediately!”
    I suppose if they wanted to keep it a secret they perhaps should not have built it so bloomin big!

  6. 6. Loz says:

    oddly enough, I can’t think of a VW car fast enough to require such a long straight.

  7. 7. Marcus says:

    Loz, Bugatti is a VW brand these days.

  8. 8. Phaedrus says:

    C’mon, Loz, howabout the Bus? 0-60 in 11 minutes? :D

  9. 9. Brady says:

    Do they have fences around this place? I’m just wondering what would happen if you encountered a deer at 253 mph.

  10. 10. Nir says:

    Not just fences, barbed wire and such.

  11. 11. Flümo says:

    Been there, seen that, got a ride (on the passengers seat, and not in a Veyron).

    It is a very strange feeling to see a rather sharp curve coming at you at 200kph - and driving through it without slowing down.

  12. 12. Rollo says:

    Brady - I don’t think deer generally move that quickly…

  13. 13. Patrick says:

    The Bugatti Veyron is sex on wheels.

  14. 14. KickerOfAss says:

    @ Patrick: That’s the best sentence I heard today!

    @ cookie monster: that would be “Scheiße! Diese verdammten Google-Sightseeing-Schweine haben unsere geheime Teststrecke entdeckt! Wir müssen sofort eine neue finden!” in German. But don’t mention the war!

    By the way, isn’t that the test track you can drive on in the PS2 games Gran Turismo 3 and 4?

  15. Google Sightseeing Admin
    15. Alex says:

    @cookie monster & KickerOfAss: LOL! If we had a quotes page, it would definitely feature that one :D

    “Scheiße! Diese verdammten Google-Sightseeing-Schweine haben unsere geheime… [insert previously secret thing here]!!”

  16. 16. Cesar in Orl says:

    I have to agree with Steve there. Plenty of room in Albuquerque to hold it WFO!!!All the way till the cows come home.

  17. 17. Ottereven says:

    >Do they have fences around this place? I’m just wondering what would happen if you encountered a deer at 253 mph.

    Quck-minced venison. And a 1 million Euro pile of scrap carbon fibre, decoratively spread across the test site.

    I used to work at a similar test track in Arizona - and yes, they do have good fences around to keep out big critters. The fences didn’t keep out the rattlesnakes, scorpions, and tarantulas, but I doubt they have that trouble in Germany.

    While I was working there, someone on an off-site test hit a black bear on a mountain road with a test vehicle - the next generation Corvette - and it did total a very expensive test car. The bear was unhurt, apparently.

    Otter

  18. 18. chris says:

    This BBC link contains photos of a crashed Veyron - rather expensive insurance job I should think.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_pictures/6423241.stm

  19. 19. Cori says:

    Thanks for the video link chris, it was AWESOME!!!

  20. 20. Cori says:

    oops sorry I meant the Google video mentioned in the beginning is awesome. Sorry chris, I know yours isn’t a video link!!!

  21. 21. Mandel says:

    I’m in the airline industry and fly to Germany often, I have seen this place from the sky making our approach in Leipzig Germany, which is in the former East Germany, I would love to see it someday, but I hear from locals that it’s pretty secure much like CIA headquarters or NSA facility. I guess you really need to know somebody to get close.

  22. 22. Chris says:

    The only reason it’s called top secret is because it used to be in the middle of a no-fly zone during the cold war so no-one knew what it was

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