Posts Tagged ‘Bertone’

BMW Spiccup

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

For some reason this incredible BMW one-​​off from 1969, (our favourite year), completely managed to pass us by these forty odd years.

You can see the car’s bloodline at first glance.

Yes, those are the Montréal–esque hooded headlamps from the pen of Marcello Gandini and the same shocking green rendering of Bertone’s audacious Alfa Carabo.

The Spicup was a Geneva launch and was based on the 2000CS — with the 2.8 litre straight six. It was sold after the show and appar­ently the car clocked over 100,000KM before its owner gave up and confined it to automotive legend.

It sold Recently at auction via Bonhams for around US$600K. That’s some serious mileage for such a valuable vehicle.

And though there’s a lot about it’s look and feel that is dead-​​on in terms of its period design, the side perspective gives a hint at where the ideas came from.

We reckon this was Gandini’s homage to 50s American futurism.

Homage to the Fiat X1/9

Monday, August 15th, 2011

The Fiat X1/​9 was, like the Lancia Monte Carlo, one of those supremely aspir­a­tional mini supercars of the eighties that made anyone of a certain age believe they could achieve.

The Bertone–penned two seater had the whiff of the exotic — mid mounted engine, rear wheel drive, it was light and it handled.

When we think of the car we always associate it with the decade that bought Margaret Thatcher and shoulder pads, but by the time that decade began it had already been available for eight years.

Such was the forward thinking nature of the Bertone design — with targa top and an acreage of period correct black plastic — it’s hardly surprising that come the eighties it was actually manufac­tured by the Carrozzeria itself.

Our fave manifest­ation is the Dallara racing version (below), that came with hugely flared arches and the rear wing.
And, of course, that Lovely brown paint job.

Concept Corner

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

In a piece of quint­es­sential 1980s expan­sionism, Bertone, kings of angular audacity, decided to hit up the American market with the Ramarro concept (that’s ‘Green Lizard’ to you and I).

The Ramarro was based on a bog-​​standard 83 Corvette — and was we thing a misguided reach out to an American market hooked on the tradi­tional values of cubic inches and heavy steel construction.

Would the yanquis ever have gone ahead with anything like this fusion of Italian futurism with the straight­for­wardness of Detroit brutalism?

We doubt it.

Still, the Ramarro was an inter­esting exercise. The cabin was swathed in an acreage of glass — and the wedgy, louvred design was remin­iscent of the Alfa Carabo and other Bertone design studies. The interior featured lizard-​​like green leather uphol­stery and switchgear replaced gear shifters — a touch that in a sense foreshadowed Ferrari’s manettino system.

The Ramarro was unveiled in LA just ahead of the 1984 Olympic games — and though the design won many plaudits in the automotive press — stimu­lated no doubt by the surge of inter­na­tion­alism that accom­panied the games — no manufac­turers were inspired enough to hire Bertone’s designers.

Shame.

Film below features a period-​​correct soundtrack by Jean-​​Michel Jarre.

Alfa Romeo Navajo by Bertone

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

GW_88_Navajo_Flank

Of all the futur­istic concepts generated by the venerable carrozeria of Bertone in the seventies, the Alfa Romeo Navajo is one of our favourites.

GW_89_Navajo_r-side

The Navajo was ased on the mechanics of the venerable object of beauty that is the ‚Alfa 33 Stradale . Bertone lengthened the original chassis to create a more spacious two-​​seater cabin than exists in the Stradale.

GW_82_Navajo_side

That outrageous, Battlestar Galactica–style bodywork was super light, having been wrought completely in fibre­glass. This of course meant that with the powerful Alfa engines would have made the Navajo a real futur­istic pocket rocket.

GW_85_Navajo_fr-detail

The front and rear spoilers were designed to adjust automat­ically according to the speed of the vehicle, which was a real innov­ation in the mid seventies. The rear wings provided an inter­esting flourish as well as support for the aft wing.

And as for the name: there’s something that hints at the tribal about the design – kind of a modern primitive grimace in its front, and you can imagine the shape hewn out of dark wood.

Classic Bertone, we think you’ll agree.

Bertone BAT Concept

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

bertone_alfa_romeo_bat_5_7_9_02-1
At the beginning of the fifties Alfa Romeo commis­sioned Giuseppe ‘Nuccio’ Bertone to produce concept vehicles focussed on on the effects of drag on a vehicle. It was eight years after the war, Italy was starting to recon­struct and it was time to build some of the techno­lo­gical devel­op­ments garnered during the war years into the design of Italian cars.

In a convenient piece of linguistic luck, the cars that resulted (built upon the Alfa Romeo 1900 chassis) were named BAT (Berlinetta Aerodinamica Technica). 
Each year between 1953 and 1955 at the Turin Auto Show, Bertone and Alfa Romeo presented a BAT concept.

To the bare eye they BATs are obviously slippery – but the
 the most inter­esting part of the car is the tail, with the length-​​ways rear windscreen divided by a slim pillar, and the two fins tapering upwards and slightly inwards. For all the BAT designs Bertone added some elements from his exper­ience working on wing profiles in the aeronautical industry.


The first of the series,BAT 5 (above, left) was presented at Turin in 1953. BAT 7 (above, middle), with an incredibly low drag digit of 0.19, came the year after. It was 1955’s BAT 9 (above, right), which had a drag coeffi­cient of 0.23, that was the most pleasing of the BAT concepts, and the most Alfa-​​looking of all the cars. Goes to show that the outrageous wings and chrome of the fifties weren’t all about boomtime guff — these crowd pleasing design elements could be functional too. bat_front

Alfa Canguro: The Most Beautiful Car Ever Made?

Monday, April 6th, 2009

alfa_cangurro

Beauty is a difficult thing to define. It’s a cliché to say that it resides in the perception of the observer. Anyone with an aesthetic atom in their being knows that the non-​​relative, objective, obviously apparent kind of beauty truly exists.

There of course can be beauty in the magic play of numbers on a balance sheet, in the engin­eering brilliance required to squeeze a hundred miles out of a litre of fuel, or the ability to carry safely a screaming family of six to the coast for a weekend without causing marital breakdown.

Problem is, this deeply embedded, functional aesthetic has appar­ently dominated vehicle design of the last few years.

But as obvious as the fact that beauty is every­where, and that it can take on a variety of manifest­a­tions – is the fact that Giugiaro’s distinctly feminine design for Bertone of the Alfa Canguro, that debuted at the Paris salon of 1964, must be one of the most object­ively beautiful cars ever designed.

Its lines flow each into each with an almost other­worldly harmony; the wheel arches describe the sort of arc that Michaelangelo must have dreamed about in the halls of renais­sance Rome; the curved glass work and fibre­glass that encased the cabin folds the driver in like the pilot of a fighter plane; the D-​​type inspired nose and cut-​​off, perky tail hints of nimbleness and endless fleet of foot.

Though the light­weight, supremely slipstreamed design never manifest in a road-​​going production Alfa, a version of the car survives, last reported shown at a concours event in Italy in 2005, appar­ently by a Japanese owner. Elements of the design informed many classic Alfa and Bertone designs, partic­u­larly the gorgeous Montréal of 1970.

Is beauty truly in the eye of the beholder?

Let us know what, if anything, pleases your pupils as much as this slice of automotive heaven.

cangurro_sketch