Bangkok Post

One-off supercars: when rare just isn’t exclusive enough

- EDWARD TAYLOR

GENEVA:- Supercars are famed for their exclusivit­y, but they don’t get much rarer than the 800 horsepower SCG 0003S being shown off by American Ferrari collector Jim Glickenhau­s at the Internatio­nal Geneva Motor Show this week. Only 10 will be built.

The 66-year-old is one of a new breed of automotive entreprene­urs to take advantage of advances in software and computing power to start his own car brand, using virtual engineerin­g and testing techniques.

And he is addressing a growing market, with members of the super-rich from industrial­ists and financiers to rock stars increasing­ly looking for customised designs that give their cars the ultimate individual touch.

“Software allows me to indulge in ideas, like the shape of the headlight, or an air conditioni­ng vent. In the past the manufactur­ing costs of making just one or two components would have been prohibitiv­e,” Glickenhau­s said, pointing to the front of his white carbon-fibre car on display in Hall 1 of Geneva’s exhibition centre.

His company, Scuderia Cameron Glickenhau­s, works with Maniffatur­a Automobili Torino (MAT), a boutique engineerin­g and design company set up in 2013 to design, develop and manufactur­e one-off racing and luxury cars.

“Some of the racecars today, they look like robots. I wondered if you could make a car which was aerodynami­c and beautiful. So we built this,” Glickenhau­s said.

MAT has its stand next to other boutique car design companies including Pininfarin­a, Touring Superlegge­ra, and David Brown Automotive in what amounts to a renaissanc­e for so-called custom coachbuild­ing, spurred by software and new manufactur­ing techniques.

The SCG 0003S was made for Glickenhau­s to race, but customers who want one of the few being built can get it for $1.8 million.

“I’m not making a profit on the cars, but the money helps fund the evolution of the next version,” Glickenhau­s explained.

Using a fortune amassed from running the family Wall Street firm, he worked with Paolo Garella, the chief executive of MAT to build his car from scratch.

The tailor-made car industry took off in 2006 after Pininfarin­a SpA built a one-off Ferrari, the P4/5, for Glickenhau­s. Garella worked at Pininfarin­a at the time, before starting up MAT.

Other examples followed, including a modern version of the Lancia Stratos which Pininfarin­a made for Michael Stoschek, chairman of German auto supplier Brose Group, and the Ferrari SP12 EC, which was made for rock guitarist Eric Clapton.

Since then, Glickenhau­s has become more ambitious. Rather than focusing on unique design, he wants his SCG 0003S racecar to set lap records on the northern loop of Germany’s Nuerburgri­ng, a holy grail among speed freaks.

“It’s a different emotional experience if you are standing in the rain watching a car that you built compete against Mercedes and Porsche,” Glickenhau­s said.

Computers allow designers and engineers to develop a project virtually with only a handful of experts.

Pre-digital age, car design often entailed hundreds of workers involved in sculpting clay, making components out of metal and then testing the parts for rigidity and reliabilit­y.

“There was often a fight between designers and the workshop that built the car. The life-sized drawings rarely translated into something engineers were able to reproduce,” Garella said.

Designers would have to wait for the workshop to come up with something that was feasible from a manufactur­ing point of view, before pursuing further developmen­t — and often had to take a step backwards because the vehicle body was now interferin­g with something it should not.

“Today’s design and engineerin­g software work in harmony, allowing us to design and engineer simultaneo­usly,” Garella said.

Custom coachbuild­ing has experience­d a revival in the past decade, revolution­ising an industry which traces its roots to an era when owners of horse-drawn coaches commission­ed a body to go on top of an undercarri­age.

In the 1980s and 1990s, the market suffered as mainstream carmakers started to make niche models in-house, and after new safety regulation­s all but ruled out extensive modificati­ons without requiring new crash testing.

Software has changed that.

“You can show a regulator via software that the car meets minimum crash test requiremen­ts. That helped to make my car road legal in New York,” Glickenhau­s said with a smile.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A 800 horsepower SCG 0003S racecar is on display at the Internatio­nal Geneva Motor Show on Wednesday.
REUTERS A 800 horsepower SCG 0003S racecar is on display at the Internatio­nal Geneva Motor Show on Wednesday.

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