Lamborghini plots four-door
Saloon to follow Urus
Concept work on an all-new Lamborghini for launch around 2021 is understood to have begun. It is part of Lamborghini boss Stefano Domenicali’s plans to set out a roadmap for sustainable growth after the Urus SUV is launched later this year.
A fourth model line – beyond the Huracán and Aventador supercars and Urus – has long been the subject of debate at the firm. Discussions have centred on how Lamborghini could take advantage of platform developments at the Volkswagen Group to make profitable cars despite its relatively low volumes.
Asked about the possibility of a fourth model line, Federico Foschini, Lamborghini’s commercial director, said: “We must be humble. The Urus is only at the pre-production phase and, while the goal is to double sales volumes over a few years, we have yet to earn that accolade.
“But of course we should always be looking to grow. If we can take this first step with Urus – a huge step – then there are possibilities.”
Making sure that the brand’s future direction is in line with its heritage “is crucial to everything we do”, according to Foschini. “That’s why we look to LM002 for the Urus, and there are other possibilities in our heritage too,” he said.
In order to accommodate production of the Urus, which will launch in December, Lamborghini has already doubled the size of its production site in Sant’agata Bolognese, including building a new state-of-the-art production facility with the capacity for further expansion.
Autocar understands that the front-running model for production is currently a front-engined, four-door, four-seater. This layout was evaluated with the Estoque concept that was revealed in 2008, but development of that car was eventually put on hold in favour of the Urus due to the global economic crisis, surging global sales of SUVS and the financial benefits of sharing the VW Group’s MLB Evo platform.
Now, however, the fourdoor, four-seat concept is seen by some senior figures at Lamborghini as the ideal layout to bridge the gap between the Urus and its other two models.
The Urus is expected to double Lamborghini sales and generate the profits required to justify further investment. Crucially, it should also change Lamborghini’s traditional customer demographic and attract more family-oriented buyers. Such a car would share its Msb-derived underpinnings with the new Porsche Panamera and Bentley Continental GT, which is due to launch later this year.
“The Urus will change the dimensions of Lamborghini’s customer base completely,” said Foschini. “We require completely new standards and we have worked hard to achieve them. The Urus is a game-changer, not just in what it will do for volumes and profits
but also in terms of how it will change our customer base. It is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for change that we must grasp fully. It is a car for Lamborghini customers of the past, most of whom have an SUV in the garage among their collection, and for the future, for customers who love Lamborghini but have always wanted a car they can use every day.”
A car in the mould of the Estoque would offer customers a still practical alternative to the Urus as their families grow up. Fears that such a car could cannibalise Urus sales are said to have been eased by the fact that most Lamborghini buyers today own multiple cars (an average of four for Huracán and seven for Aventador).
Lamborghini previously built the Espada in the late 1960s, a two-door four-seater that was converted (without factory backing) to the oneoff four-seater Frua Faena, created by Pietro Frua. In the same era, it sold the Islero in the US, which became the Jarama – both cars were created with the goal of offering supercar performance in a more practical bodystyle.
However, the Estoquestyle car has yet to be signed off because a faction at Lamborghini remains keen to investigate the possibilities of developing a bespoke, carbonfibre-intensive platform structure that could underpin a three-strong supercar family. Such a move would either position the next-generation Huracán at a lower price level and move the Aventador further up, to create a gap in between, or allow for an even more extreme model above the Aventador. Either way, the third model is being internally referred to as the new Miura, in the hope that its styling and performance would capture the imagination as the iconic 1960s sports car did.
However, this strategy would require the costly development of the platform technology – which in turn would need to fit with Audi’s plans for the R8 – and leave Lamborghini’s fortunes tied to the supercar market, a strategy that it has tried to move away from with the Urus.
Last year, Lamborghini sold 3457 cars – the first time it topped 3400 units and a rise of 7% year on year.
The front-running model for production is currently a frontengined, four-door four-seater