• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

VeloceToday.com

The Online Magazine for Italian and French Classic Car Enthusiasts

  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • As Found

zagato

Outrageous car, Outrageous article

August 11, 2025 By pete

By Pete Vack

From the Archives, August 2011.
Scroll down to read the comments!!!

The brothers Zagato didn’t have a great deal of luck with Lancias.

The Appia Zagato was always too long and too little. Although somewhat successful in the Italian 1100cc events, the street version was underpowered and overwheelbased, and the 1100cc engine strained at anything like racing speeds. From the front it was attractive, but the side view and rear view failed to delight. From the same era, the Abarth, Alfa and the Bandini Zagatos (only one built), were far more pleasing to the eye.

This content is for Premium Subscriber members only.
LoginSubscribe

Tagged With: ercole spada, lancia flavia, lancia flavia zagato, lancia zagato, owning a lancia zagato, zagato

Lamborghini: At the Cutting Edge of Design V 2

August 1, 2022 By pete

Forever Young and looking toward the future: The Lamborghini Lp1 800-4

Lamborghini: At the Cutting Edge of Design
By Gautam Sen with Branko Radovinovic and Kaare Byberg
ISBN 978-185443-317-6
784 pages, 2 volumes, hardcover, dustjacket, slipcase
1070 illustrations
U.S. $250

Review by Pete Vack
All photos from the book

Read review of Volume One

Review by Pete Vack

While you and I got old, Lamborghini, under Mimran, Chrysler and Audi, somehow managed to stay forever young. And thank goodness for that. Gautam Sen’s Volume Two of his epic Lamborghini, At the Cutting Edge of Design, leads us into unaccustomed territory, taking us from the Silhouette to the Terzo Millennio, from Mimran to Audi, detailing the models we’ve rarely thought about and introduces us to rare variations we never knew existed. Naturally, we are aware of the supercars and hypercars that were developed by Lamborghini in the 1990s to date. But not by any means too familiar; too many models, too many owners, too much money, too fast and too furious. [Read more…] about Lamborghini: At the Cutting Edge of Design V 2

Tagged With: bertone, Buying a Lamborghini Miura, chrysler, dalton watson, design forum, Dick Ruzzin, Espada, Filippo Perini, Gautam Sen, Jota Miura, Lamborghini Espada, lamborghini marzal, Lamborghini Sian, Lamborghini Silhouette, Luc Donckerwolke, Luigi Marmiroli, marcello gandini, Marzal gandini, Miura design, Walter de Silva, who designed the Miura, zagato

Concorso Italiano 2019

September 10, 2019 By pete

Story by Brandes Elitch
Photos by Brandes Elitch and Hugues Vanhoolandt

August 17, 2019 saw the 34th annual edition of the Concorso Italiano, in the eleventh year of its stewardship by Tom McDowell. It is located on the rolling turf of the Bayonet and Black Horse Golf Course on the old Fort Ord military base, adjacent to Monterey Bay. To get right to the point, this is the largest single day Italian car show in the world, with over 800 cars in attendance. [Read more…] about Concorso Italiano 2019

Tagged With: California car week, cars show, concorso italiano, Ferrari, italian car shows, Maserati, zagato

Gauld at Silverstone: Tojeiro, Tyrrell and a Bristol Zagato

August 9, 2016 By pete

Peter Hughes photographed in action with the car at Bo’ness hill Climb in 1953. Struggling with it as you can see by the arm action.  (Photo Graham Gauld.)

Peter Hughes photographed in action with the Tojeiro JAP at Bo’ness hill Climb in 1953. Struggling with it, as you can see by the arm action. (Photo Graham Gauld.)


By Graham Gauld

Regular readers will know that whatever historic race meeting I go to I tend to sniff around all the paddocks looking for cars that I either have never seen before or ones that I have not seen for years. At the Silverstone Classic July 30-31, there were a few and, of course, behind every car lies a story. [Read more…] about Gauld at Silverstone: Tojeiro, Tyrrell and a Bristol Zagato

Tagged With: Brian Lister, Bristol 406 Zagato, john Tojeiro, Ken Tyrrell, Maurice Philippe, michele alboreto, Silverstone Classic, Tojeiro-JAP, tony crook, zagato

Vernasca: Lancia through Serenissima

June 30, 2015 By pete

Kai Desinger's 1960 Lancia Flaminia Sport Zagato

Kai Desinger’s 1960 Lancia Flaminia Sport Zagato.

Story and Photos by Jonathan Sharp

A little about the history of this fascinating event: The Vernasca Hillclimb was originally sanctioned by the Automobile Club Piacenza between 1953 and 1972. The 1953 event attracted 40 entries, and was won by Alfa factory driver Consalvo Sanesi with a 3000CM. The race continued to grow, with 90 cars entered by 1955, when Massimo Leto de Priolo took first overall.

A Stanguellini Formula Junior achieved the fastest time in 1960, and by 1961 Odoarado Govoni took a Birdcage Maserati to win. The cars were getting bigger and faster as Govoni’s competition was Nando Pagliarini with a Ferrari SWB. Pagliarini returned in 1962 with the Ferrari to win. Abarth 1000s, Porsche 904s and Alfa TZs were popular entries in the 1960s, followed by the bigger, faster Abarth 2000s. In the early 1970s Lualdi brought the Ferrari 212 E hillclimb car to compete with the Porsche 908s. The last edition of Castell’Arquato-Vernasca was held May 14, 1972.

This segment reflects the cars at the event from Giannini to the one-off Serenissima. All in all, the 20th Vernasca Silver Flag Hill Climb was my sort of weekend. If you go next year, and as we understand, the event is already approved, you won’t be disappointed.

Vernasca overview
Abarth to Ferrari

John Skibiki's original Group 2 650 Gianni

John Skibiki’s original Group 2 650 Giannini.

This content is for Premium Subscriber members only.
LoginSubscribe

Tagged With: Gianni, giaur, Hofer Maserati, Jonathan Sharp, Lancia, Maserati Hofer, piacenza, vernasca hillclimb, zagato

Brandes Elitch & Hugues Vanhoolandt at Concorso Italiano

September 2, 2014 By pete

Alfa intro at Concorso: The pundits are quick to dismiss Alfa’s return to the US, but they would be wise to observe what has happened at Maserati, which went from selling perhaps 2000 cars worldwide to now selling perhaps ten times that just in the US!


By Brandes Elitch
Photos by Hugues Vanhoolandt

Back in 1984, I got a call from a friend, Joe Duray, who had just found a Maserati 3500 for sale in the local paper. Back in those pre-Internet days, that was how you found things, along with going to swap meets and taking Hemmings Motor News. We went to look at it and he bought it. The car was unmolested and totally original. It ran, but had no brakes. [Read more…] about Brandes Elitch & Hugues Vanhoolandt at Concorso Italiano

Tagged With: California car week, cars show, concorso italiano, Ferrari, italian car shows, Maserati, zagato

What’s in Your Driveway?: Zagato’s Alfa Romeo 2600

June 29, 2011 By pete

2600 Alfa Zagato in 1970. Credit VeloceToday.com

By Pete Vack

“It looks like a giant praying mantis about to leap.” Kyle Fleming’s assessment of the Alfa 2600 Zagato, was, if not overly kind, at least somewhat accurate. Zagato was never known to be anything but bold about its designs, and the Zagato was big, bold and eye catching. Fleming, used to dealing in Maseratis and Ferraris, couldn’t quite put the Alfa Zagato into focus. Such was the attraction of Zagato. The Big Z was different, rare and unusual at a time and place when the U.S. was a veritable candy store, full of rare and unusual cars at bargain basement prices.
[Read more…] about What’s in Your Driveway?: Zagato’s Alfa Romeo 2600

Tagged With: 2600 zagato, Alfa romeo zagato, alfa zagato, alfa zagato 2600, owning a zagato, six cylinder alfas, zagato

Bountiful Berlinettas: Mille Miglia 2009 PII

June 4, 2009 By Gerelli


Hot on the tail of Alfa, Ferrari and Lancia, Fiat did their berlinetta act on the 1100, culminating in the 1947 1100S Mille Miglia model. It in turn was preceded by the absolutely berlinetta 1935 Balilla 508S.

Photos by Alessandro Gerelli
Story by staff

In this part, Alessandro Gerelli brings us the Mille Miglia berlinettas from Fiat to Siata. As we have related in Part I, Enzo Ferrari was implicated in the birth of the term berlinetta. But was this so, and if so, how?
[Read more…] about Bountiful Berlinettas: Mille Miglia 2009 PII

Tagged With: berlina, berlinetta, Ferrari, Fiat, Maserati, Mille Miglia, pininfarina, siata, zagato

Primary Sidebar

     SIGN UP BELOW TO RECEIVE VELOCETODAY EVERY WEEK FOR FREE

         

       EXCLUSIVE ARTICLES ABOUT 

    EXTRAORDINARY AUTOMOBILES

PositiveSSL

Recent Posts

  • VeloceToday for April 21, 2026
  • Road America, Circa 1957
  • Sloane Street Concours, London
  • Jim Jeffords Biography Reviewed
  • The Most Famous Citroën…Ever!
  • Dominianni’s Hail Mary
  • Maranello Masterpieces at Road America, 1956
  • The Cygnet and its Swansong
  • Eager-Bearders Bugatti
  • Mystery Car: Playing the Numbers
  • We Review “The Ferrari Under The Bed”
  • A Visit to the Mercedes-Benz Museum circa 1962
  • We Remember Randy Cook
  • Brandes Elitch at the Al Engel Museum
  • Practical Classics at the NEC Birmingham, UK
  • Special Brew, The Story of the Southern African Formula One and Libre Specials
  • Shark-nose F1 Special at the Monaco Historics
  • Road America, 1956 June Sprints
  • Road America 1956 NASCAR and SCCA events
  • Frank Harrison’s Maseratis P1
  • Frank Harrison’s Maseratis P2
  • Frank Harrison’s Maseratis P3
  • The Birth of Road America, 1955
  • 1939 Tripoli Grand Prix: The Race
  • AutoWorld Brussel’s Lancia Exhibition
  • Ferrari 750 Monza: Beauty Saved
  • Repco Adelaide Motorsport Festival, 2026
  • Never Out of Date: Cartier’s Concours from 2025
  • Baby Bugatti by Marshall Buck
  • A Brief History of Disappearing Hardtops

Copyright © 2026 · VeloceToday.com · Privacy · Sitemap

MENU
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • As Found