Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

NOT ONE FOR THE PURISTS

Supercar maker’s luxurious sports SUV turns heads wherever it goes but its real appeal lies beneath the striking sheetmetal

- IAIN CURRY

A LAMBORGHIN­I SUV IS NOT SACRILEGIO­US

After all, everyone’s doing it, from Aston Martin to Ferrari. Purists may shudder, but car companies need to make money and SUVs are profit gold. Many Urus buyers also have a “proper” Lamborghin­i supercar in the garage, so the SUV is their everyday raging bull. In traffic it burbles along as effortless­ly as an Audi Q7, there’s space for three entitled kids in the back (you can option two rear seats if preferred) while its 616L boot is bigger than a Toyota Prado’s. Just as Porsche shifts shedloads of SUVs to fund developmen­t of its sports and supercars, Lamborghin­i’s doing likewise. And it’s working. Australian­s have bought more Uruses in 2021 than Huracans and Aventadors combined.

IS IT THE WORLD’S FIRST SUPER-SUV?

That’s what Lamborghin­i calls it, and the 4.0litre twin-turbo V8’s 478kW and 850Nm help its case. The all-wheel-drive Urus is no skinny Italian model at 2200kg, but can accelerate to 100km/h in 3.6 seconds and on to 305km/h, which is frankly ridiculous. If you’re brave enough to hustle one around a racetrack you’ll find it turns and stops with physics-bending ability too. Brakes are massive 440mm carbon ceramic jobs (don’t ask how much they cost to replace), while four-wheel-steering, adaptive air suspension and active roll stabilisat­ion somehow manage to suck this beast to the road. It accelerate­s with brutal, rapid force and in Corsa mode, it pops and burbles and displays unbelievab­le agility for such a big car. Think Shaquille O’Neal successful­ly pulling off Simone Biles backflips.

IT’S NOT CHEAP

But it is cheap for a Lamborghin­i. The Urus is $390,000 before on-roads – the only Lambo costing less is a two-wheel drive entry-level Huracan ($378,900). The bonkers Aventador’s sticker price begins at $788,914. Its competitor­s are priced similarly: an Aston Martin DBX is $357,000, a V8 Bentley Bentayga is $364,800 and Porsche Cayenne Turbo GT Coupe $336,100. The Audi RS Q8 – same platform and engine as the Lambo, albeit not as powerful – looks a relative giveaway at $208,377. Our test Urus cost a smidgen under $500,000 before onroads, thanks to almost $102,000 in options.

AND THE OPTIONS ARE RUDE

Those options include Verde Mantis pearl effect green paint ($17,144), black 23-inch wheels ($9898) fancy diamond stitching on the leather ($6186) a carbon fibre interior pack ($9721) and Bang & Olufsen 3D audio ($11,665). Lambo also likes to charge for items standard on a $50,000 Kia. A Panoramic roof is $5302,

DAB radio is $1414, ambient lighting $5832 and hands-free tailgate $1591.

IT’S STUNNING INSIDE AND OUT

The Urus has all the visual drama of Lamborghin­i’s supercars, just higher up and more in your face. Its screams excess, from its deliciousl­y fat rear end to oversized wheels and brakes under the sharp-edged body. It’ll never compete with a Miura for design beauty, but dressed in that green paint it’ll win any “lookat-me” award. The cabin’s a luxurious masterclas­s. Seats are uber-plush, there’s a trio of screens and everything you touch has quality to help justify the half-million dollar price. Well, except the steering wheel buttons which look directly lifted from a VW Golf. Beside a bright red missile-launcher-style cover for the engine start button there’s your off-road drive modes too. Hopefully, not even the most eccentric billionair­e would be using those.

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