2014
Lamborghini 5-95 Zagato Concept
This
project is based on an official collaboration between Automobili Lamborghini
and Zagato, with the purpose of creating a real contemporary collectible car.
In
1965 Marquis Gerino Gerini was the promoter of the first Zagato-bodied
Lamborghini, the 3500 GTZ, a "fuoriserie" based on the 350 GT
mechanics. Nearly 50 years later Albert Spiess, one of the most significant
Lamborghini worldwide collectors, gave Zagato the chance to dress the most
successful model of all time in the Bull's company history, in order to create
a modern collectible car: the Lamborghini 5-95.
Albert
Spiess boasts an unprecedented collection including several one-offs and
Lamborghini first cars, as well as some Zagato collectibles - instant classics
- like Alfa Romeo S.Z. (1990) and R.Z. (1993), Aston Martin V8 Zagato (1985)
and V12 Zagato (2012). He commissioned to the Milanese Atelier a modern
collectible car on the occasion of the celebration of 95 years of Zagato (1919
- 2014).
The
Milanese Atelier transformed the model that revolutionized Lamborghini's
history into a contemporary collectible. The Lamborghini 5-95 Zagato is based
on the Gallardo LP570-4, the best seller in the first 50 years of Sant'Agata's
company (1963-2013).
Zagato
maintained all the technical constraints of the original project but has
re-interpreted them according to its philosophy oriented towards functionalism
and rationalism - typical values of the Milanese school.
The
Zagato body expresses the typical key values of an "instant classic":
fascinating, rare and a pure expression of the brands it stands for. The 5-95
was created with the only limitation of active and passive safety witch are the
value of the donor car.
Two
"strong" themes define the design in its whole: the volume of the
front fender that bites the bonnet - integrating the functions of the lights
and the secondary air intakes - and the rear end starting from the center of
the car that gives it a thrust.
On
the front end a floating spoiler takes inspiration from the Lamborghini Raptor
Zagato, coming to a firewall in carbon fiber that conceals the front air
intakes.
Continuous
glass surfaces - a technical and stylistic theme launched by Zagato in the end
of the 40s on the Panoramic bodies and re-applied in the 80s - surround the
pillar-less body and, similarly to aeronautical cockpits, reduce noise and
improve aerodynamics.
The
side intakes, following the Lamborghini Raptor, have been visually reduced to
the minimum thanks to an air scoop on the roof as well as additional apertures
concealed in the glass surfaces. The air scoop is functionally integrated with
the double bubble roof, a signature of Zagato design, directing the cooling to
the intake manifold.
The
monolithic rear volume is chopped off by the typical truncated tail and reveals
the brutality of mechanical components protruding from the area such as tail
lamps heat release, aerodynamic features and the active spoiler.
There
isn't a sole gram of fat in a Lamborghini. It is thin and athletic, having a
lot in common with the surfaces of a Zagato body, true to the rule that a car
is as much efficient as it is compact.
Zagato
designers and engineers aimed to press the rear towards the engine and to
increase the proportion of the front. As a result, the 5-95 Zagato's volumes
express a sense of energy through fluid and organic surfaces that recall an
animal's muscles as it is ready to leap forward.
The
volumes intersect each other and suggest a jump, as if the central part of the
front is ahead of the fender. To accentuate these proportions some solutions
were introduced: in fact a new wind deflector was inserted at the base of the
windscreen in order to increase the perceived length of the bonnet - this has a
very precise aeronautical function because it improves the wind flow in the
windscreen wiper area. In the same way, the rear volume has been slightly
reduced introducing a "coda tronca" (truncated tail) to emphasize the
perception of the leap.