It's pretty much the same nowadays. No changes. I think they repaved it once, but nothing else. Now it's abandoned. It should be restored, but unfortunally politics comes in play in this case. There are lot of trees in the Monza park and in the surrounding of the baking, so the idea of cutting some of them (that would be planted elsewhere of course), bother some fools. The old layout is a blast, would be perfect for endurance races. The banking could be restored and surrounded with walls, like in the Indy circuits. Everything could be done in a way to respect the modern safety needs. Have to say, S397 should have scanned the banking, in order to recreate the original layout, fusing the data of the modern circuit with the one of the old part. If I remember well, back then Kunos posted the photos of them scanning also the banking.
These People, that you call fools, have more Rights to call the People that want to cut old Trees, fools. [/ End] of "political" Discussion.
Nope, we aren't talking of 500 years old trees inside a natural reserve, but of young plants grew up on the sides of the old banking venue and that can be cut and replaced with more trees in other parts of the park, with zero damage for the nature. Just like the tree cut that is done in a forest where there are too much trees close to each other: they cut them to allow the other forest trees to grow better and more. And they are fools, because it's not like the destruction of the amazon rain forest, clearly. The area of the circuit is surrounded by trees and they cut and plant trees every year, in order to increase the number of native plants and reduce/control the number of plants that instead aren't native of the italian and regional habitat. But still, we have some people that think that cutting a tree is always bad, no matter what. And of course they like to forget the damage done to the nature by the industies that dig and transform the materials that are used to make the objects that they use every day. Starting by computers and phones. Like the geniuses that throw paint over Picassos to protest against oil companies, but film themselves with smartphones and with Nikes on their feet.