Lancia Stratos “New and Old” Concept Shows Vicious Widebody

Marcello Gandini, the designer responsible for rolling sculptures such as the Lamborghini Miura and the Countach, is also the one who penned the just-as-eye-catching Lancia Stratos back in the early 70s, a machine whose racing version grabbed three World Rally Championship titles between 1974 and 1976. And while Lancia isn’t doing too well as part of Fiat Chrysler these days, keep in mind that Italia design house Pininfarina has resurrected this as the New Stratos.

We’re looking at a design that strongly resembles the original (you can check this out in the pair of images above), albeit packing the obvious modern touches – this is based on the Ferrari F430 Scuderia and while it’s smaller than the Prancing Horse, the contraption still casts a larger shadow than the original.

Manifattura Automobili Torino (MAT), which is the company that actually builds the New Stratos, announced a production run of just 25 units, with each set to retail for $564,000 (on top of the Fezza donor car, of course). And while we were promised two additional versions, namely a jacked-up Safari and a GT track special, these have yet to show up.

So, what could we do to pass the time? Well, for one thing, there’s a New Stratos review at the bottom of the page, but, on top of that, we can stare at the rendering below, which brings a different kind of modern twist to the original Stratos.

This pixel work follows social media trends, which involve both renderings and builds. As such, we’re talking about a widebody approach, one that ironically doesn’t try to interfere with the original styling cues too much.

Then we have the aero work found on the lower side of the Lancia, which reminds us of the New Stratos. Oh, and let’s not forget the microscopic ground clearance – this could be the result of an air suspension, in which case the driver could easily lift the machine.

In case you’re wondering, Karan Adivi is the digital artist responsible for the opinion splitter that is this Stratos. And the Pistachio finish of the Lancia is on the house. 

Related Posts

It’s a purebred, purpose-built monster. If it had one flaw though, that would that it’s only at home on the race track.

Roadster Shop is an outfit that really should need no introduction. Any build that rolls out of their doors is guaranteed to be nothing short of outstanding, and…

Bagged To The Future

Great Scott! Sorry for making you do this, but I’m going to have to ask you to cast your memory back to 2020 real quick. This might be…

For Sale: 1967 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray in Ocala, Florida

Home Car For Sale: 1967 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray in Ocala, Florida   Check out this 1967 Corvette Stingray Restomod! The Paint, the Engine, the Custom Interior –…

CGI 1953 Buick Convertible “Lead Sled” Matches Summer With Bagged Widebody

Not long ago, a couple of virtual automotive artists kicked off a new dream muscle car periplus and started imagining all sorts of cool revivals. Now, one…

1970 Buick GSX: A Look Back at the Original Muscle Car Era’s Torque King

Introduced during arguably the most exciting model year in American automotive history, the 1970 GSX was Buick’s take on muscle car perfection. Unlike GM siblings Pontiac and…

Tawny Gold 1971 Plymouth HEMI ‘Cuda Has the Full Package: Rare, Unrestored, Low Mileage

Introduced two weeks before the Ford Mustang on April 1, 1964, the Plymouth Barracuda remained in showrooms for ten years and over three generations. Initially a pony car with…