The ExCel Exhibition Centre will host its second ePrix on July 30 and 31 with tickets going on sale on Thursday ahead of the venue finally being able to welcome fans, following last yearâs behind-closed-doors race.
Formula E CEO Jamie Reigle has told Standard Sport what fans can expect when the series rocks up in the capital for its penultimate weekend.
âFans will be the biggest thing about the London ePrix, weâll have room for about 15,000 and thereâs also our E-Village fanzone,â he said.
âThereâll be grandstand seats outside and inside, hospitality, weâre trying to make it really welcoming for hardcore motorsport fans or those just wanting a fun day out.
âOne of the reasons we can race in the cities and right in the heart of these big capitals of the world is because weâre electric - the cars are quiet, they donât pollute and weâre welcome on the city streets.
âWithin London we really are pushing the envelope in terms of the show. We could go to Pall Mall and do something pretty iconic like that but weâve chosen east London intentionally because of what we can do at the ExCel, indoor and outdoor, itâs a very futuristic show.
âItâs also the first show with fans so this year weâre going to open the doors and itâll be pretty spectacular.â

Formula E hope this yearâs ePrix will produce a faster, more entertaining race than last year with tweaks to the track layout as the circuit dips in and out of the ExCel centre itself.
Furthermore, each location for the 2021-22 campaign has been given a unique, homegrown twist. In Londonâs case, street artist Mr Cenz has been enlisted to design a car livery that delivers a âcreative expression of life in east London, to literally paint onto our race carâ.
Destinations such as the capital provide the all-electric racing series Formula E with a unique edge, although these facets are not something the sport is short of. Indeed, the booming Formula One franchise, an FIA stablemate, has made a concerted effort to grow its eco credentials while pitching up in more urban locales.
Reigle is confident that Formula E can maintain a sense of distinction despite the often inevitable overlap, such as McLarenâs recent agreement to take over departing championship leaders Mercedes from 2023, although following F1 over to Las Vegas is not off the table.

âItâs interesting, weâre different because weâre electric and we race in cities,â he added.
âWeâre racing in London at the ExCel, F1 couldnât do that for reasons that are pretty obvious - but we race in Monaco, we race at Mexico City. So when we look at the F1 calendar there are a host of city races that could fit with Formula E; Singapore, Baku, Miami and Vegas would fit that well.
âThe deal would need to make sense. We would not want to be an undercard - at Monaco and Mexico we go at very different times of year. There are no immediate plans on Vegas but certainly weâre acutely aware of what F1 is doing in some of these cool cities and if thereâs some overlap and it makes sense there could be some merit to it.â
Formula E today launched ticket sales for the 2022 London E-Prix with a unique race car livery designed by an iconic east London street artist, and revealed London-raised DJ and producer Jax Jones will perform at the event. Grandstand seat tickets are available now starting at £49 from www.FIAFormulaE.com/London