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Bertone Barchetta

The Bertone Barchetta, unveiled at the 2007 Geneva Auto Show, is a stylized concept vehicle built from a Fiat Panda 100 base. The Barchetta concept, inspired by 1950's Italian racers, marks Bertone's celebration of its 95th anniversary.

 

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The Fiat 500 Barchetta, from which the vehicle borrows its floor pan and chassis, was a one-of-a-kind sports car from 1947. It was built by Niccio Bertone for his personal use.

Odd-looking and muscular, the Bertone Barchetta concept car sports a uniquely awkward but highly athletic design. The shining aluminum body of the Bertone Barchetta is striking to the eyes and the futuristic treatment is a nice novelty. It seriously looks like a compact version of the time-traveling racer they had in Back To The Future.

Features

The Bertone Barchetta is highly compact and is strictly a two-seater. The Barchetta is designed as an open-top roadster mimicking the sports vehicles that inspired it, with performance numbers fit for racing several decades ago.

The Bertone Barchetta houses a front-mounted 4-cylinder 1.4-liter engine with 100 bhp. It accelerates from 0 to 60 mph in 9.5 seconds.

The 151.7-inch long bodywork is most notable on the Barchetta with a large glazed surface running the sides from the bonnet to the rear. It joins two attractively-curved aluminum shells that tapers toward angles that creates a visually striking effect when viewed from the side.

The glazed area runs through the doors, allowing a see-through glimpse of the cabin. The upper aluminum shell of the Bertone Barchetta is entirely handcrafted and polished. The doors open rearward in the patented Bertone-style. The beautiful body is highly-defined with clean-cut lines and classic proportions.

The nose of the Bertone Barchetta features LED lights and a closed, floating grille carved elegantly into the metalwork. The rear features framed LED's and a small, leather-padded compartment.

A low-standing wraparound windscreen flanks the minimalist cabin of the Bertone Barchetta along with a rear roll bar. The interior is wrapped in natural leather with the anatomic seats permanently fixed into the metalwork. Creating a fascinating effect along with it, the white and flat dashboard is moveable.

All dials installed on the panel are clear-cut at the same size. Technological excess has been skipped inside the cabin with only the bare basics of what is needed installed. An iPod dock is lodged invitingly between the driver and passenger seats. The Bertone Barchetta stands proud on large 20-inch, single-frame alloy wheels.

Why the Barchetta?

The Bertone Barchetta is n curious concept largely because of its looks and its history. The Barchetta is barely a sports car with its ailing performance numbers. However, the proportions and novelty of its build are unique and interesting.

Bertone is definitely using this as an opportunity to try to garner more bodywork business, with their coach-building services failing to generate substantial clients in recent years. And, the Bertone Barchetta my just give them the lift they need.

 

 
 
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