Marcin Budkowski

Polish motorsports engineer (born 1977)

Marcin Budkowski
Born (1977-04-23) 23 April 1977 (age 47)
Warsaw, Poland
NationalityPoland Polish
France French
via dual nationality
Alma materEcole polytechnique
Institut supérieur de l'aéronautique et de l'espace
Imperial College London
OccupationRace engineer
Employer(s)Alpine/Renault (2017–2022)
FIA (2014–2017)
McLaren (2007–2014)
Ferrari (2002–2007)
Prost (2001–2002)
Known forFormula One engineer
TitleExecutive director

Marcin Budkowski (born 23 April 1977) is a Polish Formula One engineer. He was notably the executive director of Alpine Formula One team.[1]

Education

Budkowski graduated from École Polytechnique, Paris, in 1999 and continued his studies between 1999 and 2001 at the Institut supérieur de l'aéronautique et de l'espace (ISAE SUPAERO) and Imperial College London, specialising in aeronautics and aerodynamics.[1][2]

Motorsport career

After completing his studies, Budkowski started his career in motorsport in 2001 as an aerodynamicist for Prost. Budkowski subsequently moved to Maranello, working for Ferrari between 2002 and 2007 in a period that saw the team winning multiple championships.[1][2]

Seeking a new challenge, he then joined McLaren in 2007, working in a variety of aerodynamic roles both at the factory and trackside, notably during the 2008 title winning year, before becoming head of aerodynamics in 2012.[2][3]

His seven years at McLaren ended in 2014, after which he became Formula 1's technical and sporting coordinator for the FIA, subsequently becoming head of the Formula One technical department in 2017.[1] He then joined Renault F1 Team as executive technical director, where he remained as the team transitioned into the Alpine F1 Team.[4][5] In this role he oversaw the day-to-day running and operation of the team, worked closely with senior management and directors to ensure that the team met its objectives, he also worked with HR and finance to manage budgets and recruitment.[6] In January 2021 he was made a director of Alpine F1 Team,[7] a position he left in January 2022.[8] In February 2023, he joined Viaplay as tech analyst for Polish Formula 1 broadcast.[9]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Marcin Budkowski Biography". Renault Sport.
  2. ^ a b c "Marcin Budkowski F1 employee". Side Podcast.
  3. ^ "McLaren reshuffles its Formula 1 aero team". Autosport.
  4. ^ "Renault confirm signing of ex-FIA technical chief Marcin Budkowski". Sky Sports.
  5. ^ "Renault confirms controversial signing of Marcin Budkowski as executive director". ESPN.
  6. ^ "A day in the life of Marcin Budkowski". Renault Sport.
  7. ^ "Budkowski becomes director at Alpine Racing". Motorsport Week.
  8. ^ "Budkowski leaves Alpine's Formula 1 team". Motorsport Week.
  9. ^ "Ostatni element naszej układanki 😍 Marcin Budkowski będzie w tym sezonie pojawiał się w naszym studiu. Widzimy się już przy Grand Prix Bahrajnu 🇧🇭 #viaF1". twitter.com (in Polish). Retrieved 25 February 2023.
  • v
  • t
  • e
France Alpine F1 Team
Executive management
Philippe Krief (Chief Executive Officer)
Bruno Famin (Team Principal)
Personnel
Dirk de Beer
Davide Brivio
Marcin Budkowski
Chris Dyer
Pat Fry
Matt Harman
Eric Meignan
Alan Permane
Ciaron Pilbeam
Laurent Rossi
Otmar Szafnauer
Rob White
Race drivers
10. France Pierre Gasly
31. France Esteban Ocon
Race winners
France Esteban Ocon
2023 Test and reserve drivers
Australia Jack Doohan
Alpine Academy drivers
Australia Jack Doohan
Brazil Matheus Ferreira
Germany Sophia Flörsch
France Victor Martins
Italy Nicola Lacorte
India Kush Maini
Italy Gabriele Minì
Japan Kean Nakamura-Berta
United Kingdom Abbi Pulling
Bulgaria Nikola Tsolov
Formula One cars
A350 (test only)
A500 (test only)
A521
A522
A523
A524
Related
Renault in Formula One
Automobiles Alpine
  • v
  • t
  • e
Renault in Formula One
Équipe Renault Elf (19771985)
Renault F1 Team (20022010)
Notable personnel
James Allison
Bob Bell
Éric Boullier
Flavio Briatore
Dirk de Beer
Jean-François Caubet
Nick Chester
Denis Chevrier
Alain Dassas
Tim Densham
Mike Elliott
Patrick Faure
John Iley
Ayao Komatsu
Gérard López
Patrick Louis
Eric Lux
Rob Marshall
Paul Monaghan
Jarrod Murphy
Rod Nelson
Steve Nielsen
Alan Permane
Simon Rennie
Bernard Rey
Mark Slade
Mark Smith
Pat Symonds
Rémi Taffin
Dino Toso
Jon Tomlinson
Naoki Tokunaga
Jonathan Wheatley
Rob White
Notable drivers
Jarno Trulli
Jenson Button
Giancarlo Fisichella
Heikki Kovalainen
Nelson Piquet Jr.
Robert Kubica
World Champion(s)
Spain Fernando Alonso
Drivers' titles
2005
2006
Constructors' titles
2005
2006
Formula One cars
R202
R23
R24
R25
R26
R27
R28
R29
R30
Related
Renault
Renault Sport
RF1 Driver Programme
Renault Formula One crash controversy
Lotus Renault GP (2011)
Renault F1 Team (20162020)
Titles achieved with Renault engines
  • v
  • t
  • e
United Kingdom McLaren Racing
Personnel
Founder
Ambassador
Current
Former
Drivers
Current drivers
Reserve drivers
Test and development drivers
Driver Development Programme
F1 World Champions
Race winners
Former drivers
  • See category
Formula One titles
Drivers' titles
Constructors' titles
Cars
Formula One
Formula Two
Sports cars
USAC/IndyCar
F5000/Libre
Development cars
  • v
  • t
  • e
Italy Scuderia Ferrari
Drivers
Race drivers
Test and reserve drivers
Ferrari Driver Academy
F1 world champions
F1 race winners
Personnel
Current
Former
Cars
Formula One
Formula Two
IndyCar/CART
Sports cars
Formula One titles
Drivers' titles
Constructors' titles
  • Category:Ferrari
  • Commons:Scuderia Ferrari