Motoring
BMW recreates the Garmisch concept car that mysteriously vanished in 1970
Over the years BMW has used the Concorso d'Elegance Villa d'Este, an annual classic car show held at Lake Como, Italy, to showcase a variety of concept vehicles. Some, like the M8 Gran Coupe, have gone into production, while others like the Z4 Zagato Coupe have remained simply that, concepts.
Their most recent offering was last month with a recreation of the Garmisch - a car with a fascinating history. Originally developed by the design studio Bertone in Turin in 1970, it was to be a surprise show car at that year's Geneva International Motor Show. Reaction was positive, but there was a twist.
With the show over the Garmisch was loaded for transport by rail back to BMW's headquarters in Munich. But the car simply disappeared during the 600km journey.
The video could not be loaded.
Until today no one knows what happened to it and this inspired BMW head of design, Adrian van Hooydonk, to look into recreating the vehicle. With just a couple of black-and-white pictures to work from, he approached the original designer, Marcello Gandini, for some insight.
"We wanted to create a modern mid-sized coupe faithful to BMW's design language, but was also more dynamic and even a bit provocative," says Gandini, now aged 80, who attended the unveiling.
For more episodes, click here.
Subscribe: iono.fm | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Player.fm