Forty
years on from the debut of the first Fulvia saloon and thirty-one years after
Sandro Munari's victory with the 1.6HF in the Monte Carlo Rally, Lancia decided
to build a prototype to celebrate one of the models that made the brand-name
famous throughout the world.
Apart from anything else, the Lancia Style Centre designers have always had one
perennial dream: to recreate the Fulvia Coupé as though it had been left free to
evolve without interruption. The approach to the project was very clear from the
outset: no nostalgic self-indulgence but a post-modern reworking of the original
concept and motifs.
The dimensions and architecture of the Fulvia Coupé show car are practically the
same as before (the new model is 1334 mm high, 1665 mm wide, 3925 mm long and
with a wheelbase of 2275 mm) but with a broader track to give the car more
stability and greater strength: the front measures 1425 mm and the rear measures
1417 mm.
The new Fulvia features a truncated tail, an extremely dynamic shape and a
furrowing prow. The most distinctive stylist motif, i.e. a continuous
horseshoe-shaped band that enfolded the entire body only to emerge at the tail,
was reworked to give the car a more dynamic appearance and a tapering shape. The
point of greatest tension lies over the front wheel where all the visual weight
of the car is also concentrated to underscore the front drive and engine. The
end result is that the entire car appears to be pulled along from this point.
The drop-shaped car plan with maximum width at the front and a tendency to taper
off toward the truncated tail also contributes to this effect.
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