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Pierre Genon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Belgian engineer
Pierre Genon
CitizenshipBelgian
Alma materUniversity of Liège, Cranfield University
OccupationEngineer
EmployerHaas F1 Team
TitleToyota project manager

Pierre Genon is a Belgian Formula One and motorsports engineer. He is currently the Toyota Project Manager for the Haas F1 Team.[1]

Career

[edit ]

Genon studied electro-mechanical engineering at the University of Liège before completing a Master’s degree in Aerospace Vehicle Design at Cranfield University.[1] He began his career in motorsport with AP Racing in 1995, designing braking and clutch components, before joining Prodrive in 1997 to work on the Subaru World Rally Team programme. Over more than a decade with Prodrive he held a number of senior engineering roles, including serving as race engineer to Colin McRae, Richard Burns, and Tommi Mäkinen.[2] He progressed to become Chief Rally Engineer, contributing to Petter Solberg’s 2003 World Rally Championship title. He later served as Chief Test and Development Engineer, leading the technical direction of Subaru’s WRC testing and performance programmes.[3] In 2009 Genon moved to Peugeot Sport as Race Engineer on the LMP1 endurance programme, helping deliver overall victory at the 2009 24 Hours of Le Mans and additional race wins in the FIA World Endurance Championship.[4]

Genon moved into Formula One in 2012 when he joined the Enstone-based Lotus F1 Team as Head of Vehicle Performance Group. In this role he oversaw vehicle modelling, simulation, vertical dynamics, and the driver-in-the-loop simulator.[4] In 2014 he was promoted to Head of Performance Systems, with responsibility for all performance-engineering-related programmes, including race strategy, while also contributing to major infrastructure projects such as simulator and transmission dynamometer development. He remained in this position as the team transitioned to Renault Sport and later to the Alpine F1 Team.[5]

In 2025 Genon joined the Haas F1 Team as Toyota Project Manager, coordinating the technical collaboration between Haas and Toyota Gazoo Racing, including the development of Haas’s first driver-in-the-loop simulator.[6]

References

[edit ]
Founder
Gene Haas
Team Principal
Ayao Komatsu
Personnel
Damien Brayshaw
Tom Coupland
Andrea De Zordo
Pierre Genon
Dominic Haines
Nicolas Hennel
Mark Lowe
Laura Müller
Francesco Nenci
Ronan O'Hare
Davide Paganelli
Former Personnel
Ben Agathangelou
Ruth Buscombe
Peter Crolla
Gary Gannon
Adam Jacobs
Jose Manuel López
Arron Melvin
Dave O'Neill
Matteo Piraccini
Ed Regan
Simone Resta
Giuliano Salvi
Mark Slade
Guenther Steiner
Rob Taylor
2026 Race drivers
31. France Esteban Ocon
87. United Kingdom Oliver Bearman
Test and reserve drivers
Australia Jack Doohan
Japan Ryo Hirakawa
Development drivers
United States Kaylee Countryman
Former drivers
Brazil Pietro Fittipaldi
Mexico Esteban Gutiérrez
France Romain Grosjean
Germany Nico Hülkenberg
Denmark Kevin Magnussen
Russian Automobile Federation  Nikita Mazepin
Germany Mick Schumacher
Formula One cars
VF-16
VF-17
VF-18
VF-19
VF-20
VF-21
VF-22
VF-23
VF-24
VF-25
VF-26
Related
Haas Automation
Haas Factory Team
Stewart–Haas Racing
Scuderia Ferrari
Haas Driver Development Programme
Executive management
Flavio Briatore (Team Principal)
Steve Nielsen (Managing Director)
Philippe Krief  [pt] (Chief Executive Officer)
Personnel
Stuart Barlow
Joe Burnell
Rob Cherry
Dave Greenwood
Richard Lockwood
Karel Loos
Josh Peckett
Ciaron Pilbeam
Julian Rouse  [pt]
David Sanchez
Paul Seaby
Former personnel
Dirk de Beer
Davide Brivio
Marcin Budkowski
Chris Dyer
Bruno Famin
Pat Fry
Pierre Genon
Matt Harman
John Howard
Eric Meignan  [pt]
Oliver Oakes
Alan Permane
Alain Prost
Laurent Rossi
Mia Sharizman
Otmar Szafnauer
Rémi Taffin
David Wheater
Rob White
2026 race drivers
10. France Pierre Gasly
43. Argentina Franco Colapinto
Test and reserve drivers
India Kush Maini
Estonia Paul Aron
Alpine Academy drivers
Singapore Kabir Anurag
Republic of Ireland Alex Dunne
India Kush Maini
Italy Gabriele Minì
United Arab Emirates Keanu Al Azhari
Netherlands Nina Gademan
United Kingdom Sukhmani Kaur Khera
Race winners
France Esteban Ocon
Formula One cars
A350 (test only)
A500 (test only)
A521
A522
A523
A524
A525
A526
Related
Renault in Formula One
Automobiles Alpine
Team Enstone
Alpine Academy
Équipe Renault (19771985)
Renault F1 Team (20022010)
Notable personnel
James Allison
Bob Bell
Greg Baker
Éric Boullier
Flavio Briatore
Dirk de Beer
Daniele Casanova
Jean-François Caubet
Phil Charles
Rob Cherry
Nick Chester
Denis Chevrier
Chris Cooney
Tad Czapski
Alain Dassas
Tim Densham
Mike Elliott
Patrick Faure
Dave Greenwood
Nicolas Hennel
Jean-Jacques His  [fr]
John Iley
Ayao Komatsu
Gérard López
Bradley Lord
Patrick Louis
Fabrice Lom
Eric Lux
Jonathan Marshall
Rob Marshall
Paul Monaghan
Jarrod Murphy
Rod Nelson
Steve Nielsen
Alan Permane
Simon Rennie
Bernard Rey
Iñaki Rueda
Paul Seaby
Mark Slade
Mark Smith
Patrizia Spinelli
Jason Somerville
Pat Symonds
Rémi Taffin
Dino Toso
Robin Tuluie
Jon Tomlinson
Naoki Tokunaga
Martin Tolliday
David Wheater
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
Team Enstone
Lotus Renault GP (2011)
Renault F1 Team (20162020)
Executive management
Cyril Abiteboul (managing director)
Luca de Meo (Group CEO)
Marcin Budkowski (Executive Director)
Jérôme Stoll (President)
Notable personnel
Greg Baker
Dirk de Beer
Stuart Barlow
Bob Bell
Rob Cherry
Nick Chester
Chris Cooney
Lucia Conconi
Matthieu Dubois
Chris Dyer
Pat Fry
Pierre Genon
Matt Harman
John Howard
Pete Machin
Karel Loos
Josh Peckett
Alan Permane
Ciaron Pilbeam
Alain Prost
Chris Richards
Rémi Taffin
Paul Seaby
Mia Sharizman
Mark Slade
Julien Simon-Chautemps
Martin Tolliday
Jon Tomlinson
Frédéric Vasseur
Notable drivers
Kevin Magnussen
Jolyon Palmer
Carlos Sainz Jr.
Nico Hülkenberg
Daniel Ricciardo
Esteban Ocon
Renault Sport Academy
Max Fewtrell
Christian Lundgaard
Caio Collet
Zhou Guanyu
Oscar Piastri
Hadrien David
Formula One cars
R.S.16
R.S.17
R.S.18
R.S.19
R.S.20
Related
Groupe Renault
Renault Sport
Alpine F1 Team
Team Enstone
Titles achieved with Renault engines
Notable personnel
James Allison
Greg Baker
Éric Boullier
Matthew Carter
Daniele Casanova
Guillaume Cattelani
Nick Chester
Rob Cherry
Chris Cooney
Lucia Conconi
Dirk de Beer
Mike Elliott
Federico Gastaldi
Pierre Genon
Pierre Hamelin
Nicolas Hennel
John Howard
Ayao Komatsu
Karel Loos
Gérard López
Patrick Louis
Eric Lux
Jonathan Marshall
Jarrod Murphy
Rod Nelson
Alan Permane
Ciaron Pilbeam
Simon Rennie
Chris Richards
Iñaki Rueda
Andy Ruhan
Paul Seaby
Mark Slade
Martin Tolliday
Jon Tomlinson
Naoki Tokunaga
Simon Virrill
David Wheater
Drivers
Belgium Jérôme d'Ambrosio
France Romain Grosjean
Finland Heikki Kovalainen
Venezuela Pastor Maldonado
Finland Kimi Räikkönen
Race winners
Finland Kimi Räikkönen
Formula One Cars
E20
E21
E22
E23 Hybrid
Related
Genii Capital
Group Lotus
Lotus F1 Junior Team
Team Enstone

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