MSR Houston CCW
The Motor Speedway Resort Houston, also known as MSR Houston, is a motorsports complex featuring a 17-turn, 2.36-mile race track for cars and motorcycles and a separate, independent 3/4-mile go-kart course. Both raceways are accessible to the general public for an entry fee, with club members having special perks such as participating in competitions organized by the club. MSR Houston is in Angleton, a 45-minute ride south of downtown Houston, Texas. Several racing schools operate in the facility, such as the Competition Driving School that prepares aspiring drivers to get an SCCA Full Competition License after graduation from their class.
The climate in Houston allows racing at MSR Houston year-round if you're able to withstand 100-plus degrees Fahrenheit inside your car during the summer. There is heavy rainfall throughout the year, especially from May to October, and ambient humidity tends to be high year-round. The main 2.36-mile road course in MSR Houston is a perfect blend of high-speed turns and hard braking zones. Its average speed is 79 mph for the counterclockwise orientation and 70 mph for the clockwise one. Several sections of the track require heavy steering because the turns alternate rapidly between left and right, making it a highly technical track ideal for driver training.
MSR Houston's counterclockwise configuration delivers 3.830 kilometers through 17 turns representing the facility's primary racing direction with 79 mph average speeds, located in Angleton, 72 kilometers south of downtown Houston. This CCW routing emphasizes the track's natural design flow where corner banking, elevation transitions, and brake zone locations work as original 12-meter-width layout intended, creating faster lap times and higher confidence compared to the 70 mph clockwise alternative that reverses all reference points. The 2.38-mile counterclockwise layout combines high-speed corners with hard braking zones across the typical racing direction, rewarding drivers who master the standard brake markers and apex locations that clockwise configuration transforms completely through reversed approach angles and opposite banking dynamics.
The CCW configuration's character emerges from being MSR Houston's intended design direction where 17-turn complexity flows naturally rather than fighting reversed geometry. The counterclockwise routing creates 79 mph average speeds versus 70 mph clockwise, demonstrating how corner design optimizes for specific direction—banking angles, run-off placement, and sight lines all favor CCW flow. Texas Gulf Coast climate creates year-round racing with humid subtropical conditions producing track temperatures regularly exceeding 50°C in summer combined with high humidity affecting cooling systems and tire degradation significantly. The facility's multiple venue options including 1.2-kilometer karted track, 16-hectare rally course, and 8,400-square-meter skidpad provide varied motorsport experiences beyond the main road course. SCCA, NASA, club racing organizations, and professional series utilize CCW as standard direction. The configuration particularly suits experienced drivers familiar with traditional counterclockwise flow common across North American road racing, where MSR Houston's CCW layout maintains conventional left-hand-heavy turn distribution (typical of CCW circuits) versus the CW variant's reversed dynamics. Located 45 minutes from Houston's 2.3 million metropolitan population, MSR Houston CCW provides Texas Gulf Coast's premier road racing venue where standard counterclockwise direction enables faster speeds and more natural flow than the alternative clockwise configuration serving primarily as novelty variation.