After completing his
civil engineering degree with specialization in transport and traffic management at
Fachhochschule Aachen, Tilke established Tilke Engineering in 1984, combining skills in architecture, civil engineering and electronic engineering to provide complete solutions for motor racing and waste disposal projects.
Formula One Tilke is one of four designers recognised by the
FIA but has, with the exception of the Silverstone redesign in 2010, been one of the designers to be commissioned to design
Formula One tracks. One of his first minor tasks was to design and build a short access road at the
Nürburgring, earned due to contacts made by his racing efforts there. His first major job was the transformation of the fast
Österreichring to the much shorter
A1-Ring in
Austria, in the 1990s. Tilke was involved in the radical overhauls of European circuits, such as the
Hockenheimring,
Circuit de Catalunya and
Nürburgring, as well as
Fuji Speedway in Japan. Tilke secured the contracts to design many high-profile new world circuits from scratch, mainly in Asia but also in eastern Europe. He designed
Sepang International Circuit,
Bahrain International Circuit,
Shanghai International Circuit,
Istanbul Park Racing Circuit,
Valencia Street Circuit,
Marina Bay Street Circuit,
Yas Marina Circuit,
Korea International Circuit and the
Buddh International Circuit. Tilke also designed the new
Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas, where F1 made its return to the United States in 2012. Tilke's latest designs include
Sochi Autodrom which hosted its first
race in 2014 with the debut of
Russia in F1, Kuwait Motor Town (Kuwait) which opened officially in 2019, and the
Hanoi Street Circuit which was set for an inaugural race in April 2020 but got cancelled due to
COVID-19. Tilke has designed every track with several other engineers from Tilke Engineering, as well as F1's former commercial rights holder
Bernie Ecclestone. After viewing the track site and "once factors such as topography, wind direction, infrastructure and
soil quality are known" the design work can begin. Tilke focuses on "conceiving dramatic architecture that reflects the host country, like Sepang's lotus-leaf grandstands in Malaysia", while also aiming for spectator comfort and clear viewing. He "build[s] corners that promise a fast and interesting race but avoid pulling the field apart". ==Criticism==