Times Colonist

Ferrari hometown irked by tourist testers

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MARANELLO, Italy — In the streets of Maranello, the hometown of Ferrari, the roar of the famed sports car is no longer the occasional bragging right of a proud new owner, but a constant backdrop as a number of test-drive businesses give would-be Schumacher­s the chance to rev up and peel out.

The howl of engines is disturbing residents’ tranquilli­ty — including the afternoon siestas — and the risk of speeding cars is a safety concern, say city officials, who have started cracking down on the businesses. With 37 supercars available for test drives in a city of 17,000, complaints have been mounting.

“They are obviously big-cylinder cars that are very powerful, and they are circulatin­g on the same streets with regular traffic,” says Maranello Mayor Massimilia­no Morini. “You can understand that this creates a very big problem of cohabitati­on for those living nearby who understand­ably want and have the right to rest.”

The test-drive businesses have been cashing in on the supercar maker’s global appeal by offering aficionado­s without the wealth to buy their own hot wheels a highpowere­d spin “for the price of a dinner out,” as one business owner put it. That translates to 80 euros ($85 US) for a 10-minute drive in a Ferrari F430 Spider. For a two-hour spin in a Ferrari 458 Special, the cheque goes up to 1,400 euros ($1,485 US).

While such businesses exist in cities around the world, from London to Paris to Las Vegas, driving a Ferrari around Maranello is an unrivalled experience for the true Ferrari fan.

So far, there have been no significan­t accidents in Maranello, according to city officials, and the test-drive business owners say the most damage has come from scraping wheels on curbs. All test drives are accompanie­d by a trained race-car driver.

That hasn’t lessened safety concerns, however. Maranello’s police force conducted more than 450 traffic controls involving the supercars in the first nine months of the year, with 305 fines issued over the past five years, according to city statistics.

Maranello and neighbouri­ng Fiorano have teamed up to tighten rules limiting hours that the test drives can take place. They essentiall­y cut out a couple of hours in the early afternoon and ban companies from soliciting customers near the gates of the Ferrari museum, which is visited by 300,000 people each year. To improve compliance, Maranello has imposed an eightday suspension after the third citation, which Morini says is a bigger deterrent than the previous 500-euro fine.

Business owners say the rules have cut off oxygen to their enterprise­s. “It’s like asking a restaurant to close between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m.,” Stefano Ravazzini, owner of Push-Start, which was the first to launch the test-drive service six years ago.

The everyman enterprise­s are in many ways anathema to Ferrari’s exclusive market position.

The centrifuga­l push back into a leather-clad seat as a Ferrari accelerate­s from 0 to 100 km/h in just over three seconds is meant to be a thrill attainable only for those who can afford the nearly 200,000 euro starting sticker price, and that is limited to just over 7,000 new cars a year.

It’s not entirely clear, however, that the businesses actually harm Ferrari’s well-tended image.

“In some ways, it almost highlights how special the true Ferrari owners’ experience is,” said Robert Haigh, an executive with the London-based Brand Finance asset value consultanc­y.

While the short-term test-drivers “will go away empty-handed,” Ferrari owners get a VIP experience, including a factory tour, atelier experience personaliz­ing cars down to contrast stitching on the leather seats and maybe even a few laps around the famed Fiorano Formula 1 test track.

“It sort of brings home that it is not just a personal pet project of yours,” Haigh said. “You see what demand there is in the rest of the world, and you get to have the real experience.”

 ??  ?? A client drives a Ferrari car out of the Push-Start test-drive service, in Maranello, Italy, just outside the gates of the Ferrari Museum.
A client drives a Ferrari car out of the Push-Start test-drive service, in Maranello, Italy, just outside the gates of the Ferrari Museum.

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