Evo India

We need to talk about Aston

Aston Martin has a history of being brought back from the brink of financial ruin; its current saviour is billionair­e Lawrence Stroll, who has bold and ambitious plans for the marque ― as he tells evo

- WORDS by ADAM TOWLER

VALKYRIE WAS INSANE. IT’S HARDER TO BUILD THAN AN F1 CAR

‘IDID NOT TAKE OVER A HEALTHY company” is a strong opening gambit, but Lawrence Stroll has never been one to pull his punches, and you get a clear sense that the 62-year-old hasn’t occupied all those chairmen’s seats without first climbing off the fence. Aston Martin was in a bad place in 2020. Now, 24 months after taking control of the embattled car company following the catastroph­ic public listing under Andy Palmer, the Canadian billionair­e is running us through his plans for the next five years and beyond.

That 2018 IPO had seen Aston’s share price crash almost immediatel­y after the bell on London’s Stock Exchange rang out, the money raised going to previous shareholde­rs and executives rather than finding its way back into the business where it was needed most. For a company that was starved of cash before it went public, it was seemingly no better off now that its financial laundry was being hung out in public for all to see. Having committed to converting vast aircraft hangars into factories to produce the much-needed DBX, building a hypercar that would be as quick as an F1 car, relaunchin­g Lagonda as a luxury electric brand, committing to a Le Mans programme without any agreed regulation­s in place, and announcing a family of mid-engined supercars to go with the traditiona­l front-engined GT and sports cars… the public float designed to pay for it all wasn’t the golden goose it was hoped to be, especially as the to-do list was enough to make technical partner Mercedes-Benz wince.

“I spoke to the previous shareholde­rs a month before their IPO, but they didn’t want to know,” says Stroll. “They didn’t want any disruption or distractio­n to their IPO plans.” The Canadian had made contact because he was then the new owner of Racing Point Force India, a Formula 1 team he had brought out of administra­tion in 2018. Having been around the F1 circus since the Team Lotus days three decades ago ― “I learnt a lot and lost a few million dollars” ― he knew that without an OEM backer you were going nowhere fast in F1.

“There was only one OEM not in F1 that had the status for F1, but Aston Martin had a sticker on a Red Bull, so I said to the car guys, ‘I’ll give you an F1 team, paint the cars British Racing Green.’ But they turned me down.

“A year after their IPO, they called me and said: ‘We’re in the shit here.’ I said: ‘I know, I’ve read the papers, you didn’t put any money back into the business.’” And they had, in Stroll’s view, made some big mistakes: “PreIPO, Aston Martin sold 4000 cars; the year of the IPO they sold 6000. Now, 2000 people didn’t wake up and say, ‘I have to buy an Aston Martin this year.’ What did happen is that they put the company in trouble.”

Initially, Stroll planned to invest `4,000 crore to right the Aston Martin ship. To date, that figure is already up to `5,000 crore and more is still needed if the company is to sell the 10,000 cars per year Stroll has forecast. That split will come from 4,000 front-engined sports cars, 4,000 SUVs and 2,000 mid-engined supercars,

including the Valkyrie.

“Valkyrie was an insane undertakin­g, to build this car for the road,” says Stroll. “It’s harder to build than an F1 car, and the F1 team has 800 people to build five F1 cars a year. There’s been nothing like it before and there will be nothing like it again.”

To date, ten Valkyries have been built: seven road cars and three Pro-Am track versions. When we visited Gaydon in February, two completed cars were awaiting sign-off, a further three were in build and two were waiting to be started, with nine carbonfibr­e tubs freshly delivered from Multimatic ready for their turn to enter the assembly hall. CEO Tobias Moers walks us through the assembly process, reinforcin­g Stroll’s point by explaining that these cars are more complex than an F1 or Le Mans racer because they mix the technology of those pure racers with the requiremen­ts of road car legislatio­n. It’s why Stroll moved some of his F1 team personnel from Silverston­e to Gaydon to build the Valkyrie.

All Aston Martins post-2025 will be petrolhybr­id or fully electric, with 60 of the 176 engineers recently hired working purely on EV tech and the firm having also partnered with British Volt to work on battery technology.

Making up the bulk of the mid-engined sales will be the Valhalla hybrid hypercar and its smaller sibling, which the previous management called Vanquish, though Stroll isn’t sold on the name just yet. This model will, however, form the backbone of Aston Martin’s motorsport activities away from F1, with a trackday special, a one-make series and GT3 and GT4 racing variants. A return to Le Mans is also under discussion, potentiall­y as soon as 2023.

What will take place next year is the overhaul of the Vantage, DB11 and DBS. “This will be more than a facelift,” says Stroll. “These cars will be all new — new powertrain­s, suspension, design and interiors; finally Aston Martins will get touchscree­ns!” AM’s agreement with Mercedes meant it could only use tech that was at least

three years old. “It was a silly thing the previous management agreed to,” says Stroll. “I made an agreement with Ola [Källenius, Mercedes’ CEO] that I have the same equipment as him. You can’t have an Aston Martin that sells for `1.5 crore more than a Mercedes with three-year-old tech. And he agreed. But we’ll also use our own graphics and voices.”

Away from model strategy, talk turns to fuel, specifical­ly the partnershi­p agreed with Aramco and the F1 team. “We will be working with them on sustainabl­e fuel — which we must have in F1 by 2026 — but I want to work with them on how we also get these fuels in the petrol stations and into our cars.

“We’ll work with them on fuel, lubes, and non-metallic components — they are one of the world’s biggest producers of carbonfibr­e and we use a lot of carbonfibr­e at Aston Martin…” A new autoclave and wind tunnel are also currently under constructi­on at the F1 team’s new Silverston­e site.

We’re already 25 minutes into our allotted 15-minute slot and in five minutes Stroll is scheduled to pull the covers off the new F1 car, giving us just enough time to ask about the speculatio­n around Moers’s future. “He’s not going anywhere,” says Stroll. “He’s German and hard. This company needed a little German and hard, and some feathers have been ruffled, but I want and need him here.”

Lawrence Stroll is two years into his five-year plan for Aston Martin, which if he succeeds will see his F1 team fighting for world titles in 2025 and 10,000 new Astons finding owners in the same year. To achieve even one of these goals from where AM is today would be considered success for most people, but you get the feeling not for Stroll. Yet if he achieves both, then even for someone with his track record it would be quite extraordin­ary. ⌧

A RETURN TO LE MANS

IS UNDER DISCUSSION, POTENTIALL­Y AS SOON AS

2023

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 ?? WORDS by ADAM TOWLER ??
WORDS by ADAM TOWLER
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below: Lance Stroll, Lawrence Stroll and Sebastian Vettel at the launch of the new F1 car; Stroll Snr expects the team to be competing for titles by 2025; Valkyrie production is now in full swing
Above, right and below: Lance Stroll, Lawrence Stroll and Sebastian Vettel at the launch of the new F1 car; Stroll Snr expects the team to be competing for titles by 2025; Valkyrie production is now in full swing
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