The Autodromo La Chutana is a 1.5-mile (2.41) road course, the most important in Perú, paved on a deserted patch of flat terrain on San Bartolo, an hour trip south of Lima, the country's capital. La Chutana is a fast-paced circuit compatible with clockwise and anticlockwise orientation. The road course is available for drifting on its 800 meters (2624 feet) straightaway and houses autocross, motorcycling, and road racing competitions. The 6 Horas Peruanas is the most important event held annually at the raceway. The Climate at the circuit location is unique: high humidity and cloudy skies year-round, but with an absence of rainfall causing the place to be deserted.
The Autodromo La Chutana starts/ends at the middle of its front straight, and its counterclockwise orientation heads southeast from there into turn number one. A short back straight comes next, leading into a right-left turn combo and, from there, into another straight segment. Turns four to seven are snaking sweepers with alternate directions, ending in the front straightaway where drivers press their gas pedal to the maximum.