Pininfarina S.p.A.(short forCarrozzeria Pininfarina) is an Italiancar designfirm andcoachbuilder,with headquarters inCambiano, Turin,Italy. The company was founded byBattista "Pinin" Farinain 1930. On 14 December 2015, the Indian multinationalMahindra Groupacquired 76.06% of Pininfarina S.p.A. for about €168 million.[2]

Pininfarina S.p.A.
Company typePublic(S.p.A.)
BIT:PINF
Industry
Founded23 May 1930;94 years ago(23 May 1930)
FounderBattista Farina
Headquarters,
Italy
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Silvio Pietro Angori (CEO) Gianfranco Albertini (CFO)
ServicesAutomotive design
RevenueIncreaseUS$78.5 Million[1]
(2020)
OwnerTech MahindraandMahindra & Mahindra(76.06%)
Number of employees
700+ (2021)
ParentTech MahindraandMahindra & Mahindra
SubsidiariesAutomobili Pininfarina
Websitewww.pininfarina.it

Pininfarina is employed by a wide variety of automobile manufacturers to design vehicles. These firms have included long-established customers such asFerrari,Alfa Romeo,Peugeot,Fiat,GM,Lancia,andMaserati,to emerging companies in the Asian market with Chinese manufactures likeAviChina,Chery,Changfeng,Brilliance,JACandVinFastinVietnamand Korean manufacturersDaewooandHyundai.

Since the 1980s, Pininfarina has also designed high-speed trains, buses, trams, rolling stocks, automated light rail cars, people movers, yachts, airplanes, and private jets. Since the 1986 creation of "Pininfarina Extra", it has consulted on industrial design, interior design, architecture, and graphic design. Pininfarina was run by Battista's sonSergio Pininfarinauntil 2001, then his grandsonAndrea Pininfarinauntil he died in 2008. After Andrea's death, his younger brotherPaolo Pininfarinawas appointed CEO.[3]

At its height in 2006, the Pininfarina Group employed 2,768 people, with subsidiary company offices throughout Europe, Morocco, and the United States. As of 2012, with the end of the automotive production series, employment has shrunk to 821. Pininfarina is registered and publicly traded on the Milan Stock Exchange,Borsa Italiana.

History

edit

Specialist coachbuilder

edit
Battista "Pinin" Farinaand his sonSergio,c.1950

When automobile designer and builderBattista "Pinin" Farinabroke away from his brother's coachbuilding firm,Stabilimenti Farina,in 1928, he founded "Carrozzeria Pinin Farina" with financial help from his wife's family andVincenzo Lancia.That first year, the firm employed eighteen and built 50 automobile bodies.[4]

On 22 May 1930 papers were filed to become a corporation,Società anonima Carrozzeria Pinin Farinaheadquartered in Turin, Italy, at 107 Corso Trapani.[5][6] During the 1930s, the company built bodies forLancia,Alfa Romeo,Isotta Fraschini,Hispano-Suiza,Fiat,Cadillac,andRolls-Royce.[7]With its close relationship with Lancia, the pioneer of themonocoquein automobile design, Farina became the firstcoachbuilderto build bodies for the new technique also known as unibody construction. This development happened in the mid-1930s when others saw the frameless construction as the end of the independent coachbuilder.[8]

In 1939,World War IIended automobile production, but the company had 400 employees building 150 bodies monthly. The war effort against the Allies brought work making ambulances and searchlight carriages.[4]The Pinin Farina factory was destroyed by Allied bombers, ending the firm's operations.[9]

After World War II

edit
1947Cisitalia 202SC
Nash-Healeyroadster
Cadillac Allanté

After the war, Italy was banned in 1946Paris Motor Show.The Paris show was attended by 809,000 visitors (twice the pre-war figure), and queues stretched from the main gate to the Seine.[10]Pinin Farina and his son Sergio, determined to defy the ban, drove two of their cars (an Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 S and a Lancia Aprilia cabriolet) from Turin to Paris and found a place at the entrance to the exhibition to display the two new creations. The managers of the Grand Palais said of the display, "the devil Pinin Farina", but to the press and the public, it was the successful "Turin coachbuilder's anti-salon".[11]

At the end of 1945, theCisitalia 202 Coupéwas designed. An elegantly proportioned design with a low hood, it is the car that usually is given credit for establishing Pinin Farina's reputation.[12]The Pinin Farina design was honored in the Museum of Modern Art's landmark presentation "Eight Automobiles" in 1951.[13]A total of 170 Coupés were produced by Pinin Farina.

The publicity of theMuseum of Modern Artexhibit brought Pinin Farina to the attention ofNash-Kelvinatormanagers.[4]The subsequent cooperation withNash Motorsresulted in high-volume production of Pinin Farina designs and provided a significant entry into the United States market. In 1952, Farina visited the U.S. for the unveiling of his design for theNash AmbassadorandStatesmanlines, which, although they did carry some details of Pinin Farina's design, were primarily designed by Nash's then-new in-house styling staff when the original Farina-designed model proved unsuited to American tastes, exhibiting a popular 1950s appearance called "ponton".TheNash-Healeysports carbodywas, however, completely designed and assembled with Nash drivetrains in limited numbers from 1952 until 1954 at Pinin Farina's Turin facilities. Nash heavily advertised its link to the famous Italian designer, much asStudebakerpromoted its longtime association withRaymond Loewy.As a result of Nash's million advertising campaign, Pinin Farina became well known in the U.S.[4]

Pinin Farina also built the bodies for the limited-seriesCadillac Eldorado Broughamfor General Motors in 1959 and 1960. They were assembled in Italy and shipped back to the U.S. There were 99 Broughams built in 1959 and 101 in 1960. A similar arrangement was repeated in the late 1980s when Pininfarina designed (and partially assembled) theCadillac Allantéat theSan Giusto Canavesefactory. The car bodies were assembled and painted in Italy before being flown from theTurin International Airportto Detroit for final vehicle assembly.

Ferrari partnership

edit

It started in 1951 with a meeting at a restaurant inTortona,a small town halfway between Turin and Modena. This neutral territory was chosen because neither Farina norEnzo Ferrariwanted to meet at the other's headquarters. Battista's son,Sergio Pininfarinarecalled, "It is not difficult to imagine how I felt that afternoon when my father, without taking his eyes off the road for one moment, told me his decision as we drove back to Turin:" From now on you'll be looking after Ferrari, from A to Z. Design, engineering, technology, construction—the lot! "—I was over the moon with happiness."[14]

Since that meeting, a 61-year relationship endured where the only road-going production Ferrari not designed by Pininfarina was the 1973Dino 308 GT4.[15]Their relationship was so close that Pininfarina became a partner of Ferrari in "Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFAC", the organization that ran Ferrari's race team from 1961 until 1989,[16]Pinin was a vice president of Ferrari,[17]and Sergio later sat on Ferrari's board of directors.[18]

However, this special relationship came to an end with the 2012-17Ferrari F12berlinetta,the last model entirely penned by Pininfarina, while Centro Stile Ferrari has designed each car since 2013'sLaFerrari.[19][15]

Large-scale manufacturing

edit
Alfa Romeo Giulietta Spider

From 1954 until 1955, Pinin Farina purchased land inGrugliasco,outside Turin, for a new factory. "The factory in no way would look like the one of Corso Trapani. It would be a car no longer on my measurements but those of my children, built looking like them; I had this in mind and wanted it," said Farina.[citation needed]

Around the same time, Alfa Romeo accepted Pininfarina's design overBertonefor the newGiulietta Spider.The Alfa was the first vehicle that Pinin Farina produced in large numbers. Alfa Romeo chose Pinin Farina to make the Spider mainly because they felt confident they could produce 20 cars daily for a run of 1,000 bodies. The Spider was a massive success for Alfa Romeo and Pinin Farina.Max Hoffman,the importer for the United States, said he could sell as many as they could make. In 1958, the first year of production, they produced 1,025 units, which then expanded to over 4,000 units in 1959, the first full year of the new Grugliasco factory.[20]

Second generation of leadership

edit

Starting with planning the new plant in Grugliasco in 1956, Farina began to groom his replacements–Sergio, his son, and Renzo Carli, his son-in-law. To his heirs apparent, Farina said of the Corso Trapani facility, "This old plant has reached the limits of its growth. It has no room for expansion and is far from being up to date. If I were alone, I'd leave it as it is. But I want you to decide which way to go–to stay as we are or to enlarge. Either way is fine with me. It's your decision, and I don't want to know what it is. I'm finished, and it's your time to take over. The future is absolutely up to you."[8]In 1958, upon leaving for a world tour, Farina added, "In my family, we inherit our legacies from live people–not from the dead."[8][21]

Change of corporate name to Pininfarina

edit

In 1961, at 68, "Pinin" Farina formally turned his firm over to his son, Sergio, and his son-in-law, Renzo Carli. The same year, the President of Italy formally authorized the change of Farina's last name to Pininfarina, and the business took on the same name.

Pininfarina was run by Battista's grandsonAndrea Pininfarinafrom 2001 until he died in 2008. Andrea's younger brotherPaolo Pininfarinawas appointed successor.[3]Paolo died in April 2024.[22]

Modernizing for a new world

edit

Starting in the mid-1960s, Pininfarina started investing in the science of automotive design, a strategy to differentiate itself from the other Italian coachbuilders.

In 1966, Pininfarina opened the Studies and Research Centre (Studi e Ricerche) inGrugliasco.The research centre occupied 8,000 sq. metres (2 acres) and employed 180 technicians to produce 25 prototypes yearly.[23]

The Calculation and Design Centre was set up in 1967, the first step in the process of technological evolution that, during the 1970s, would take Pininfarina into the lead in automated bodywork design.[24]

Then in 1972 construction of a full-sizedwind tunnelwas completed. The project was started in 1966. When it opened, it was the first wind tunnel with the ability to test full-sized cars in Italy and one of the first in the world with this ability.[24]For example,GM's full-sized wind tunnel did not open until 1980.[25]

New infrastructure and expansion

edit

The 1980s started a period of expansion for Pininfarina.

In 1982, the company opened "Pininfarina Studi e Ricerche" inCambiano.It was separate from the factory and wind tunnel inGrugliascoto keep design and research activities independent from manufacturing. On 14 October 2002, Pininfarina inaugurated a new engineering center. The new facility, built at the Cambiano campus, gave greater visibility and independence to the engineering operations.

In 1983, Pininfarina reached an agreement withGeneral Motorsto design and build theCadillac Allanté.The Allanté project led to the building of the San Giorgio factory in 1985.[26]

In 1996,Mitsubishientered into talks for Pininfarina to build their new compact SUV, thePajero,in Italy. While Mitsubishi recognized Pininfarina's expertise in design and engineering, the reason for choosing them was that manufacturing costs were half of those in Germany.[27]After entering into an agreement in 1996, Pininfarina purchased an industrial site atBairoCanavese nearTurin,Italy. in April 1997, Bairo Canavese was dedicated to the production of the new Mitsubishi Pajero Pinin.

2006Volvo C70

Pininfarina Sverige AB in Uddevalla, Sweden, was established in 2003 as a joint venture (JV) betweenVolvo Carsand Pininfarina to produce a new Volvo convertible that will be sold in Europe and the United States. The JV is owned 60% by Pininfarina and 40% by Volvo.[28]The C70 model designed by Volvo's John Kinsey—was launched on 13 April 2006, sharing the Volvo P1 platform used in the S40.

Architecture

edit

Pininfarina has helped to plan multi-family residences with Cyrela Real Estate.[29]Related Group,[30]and commercial projects with Bosque Real,[31]Roadside Development, and Higold Group.[32]They were also involved in the building of the Istanbul Airport[33]and Juventus Arena. In 2016 Pininfarina, in collaboration with Reflex, created the Segno furniture Collection; an integrated modular system.[34]They have also collaborated with Italian wood distributor Corà Parquet, to develop wooden flooring surfaces[35]as well as Higold on a line of outdoor furniture.[36]

New economic realities

edit

In April 2008, after three years of serious losses totaling 115 million euros at the end of 2007,[37]Pininfarina made the first of several moves to raise capital and restructure its enormous debt:

On 29 April 2008 Pininfarina announcedPiero Ferrari,Alberto Bombassei(chairman ofBrembo), and the Marsiaj family (founders of the Sabelt seatbelt company), would join withVincent Bolloré,a French financier, andRatan Tata,head of India'sTata Groupconglomerate, who already announced their plans to invest, would together invest €100 million. Funding would come through the sale of stock to other investors. The Pininfarina family was willing to reduce its share from 55% to 30%, which would still be enough to secure a controlling interest.[38]On 31 December 2008, Pininfarina announced adebt restructuringthat would require the family to sell its stake in the company. The agreement was made after Pininfarina's value dropped 67% during 2008, with a market capitalization of about €36 million. It had total debt of €598 million at the end of November. Of that amount, €555 million was the subject of the debt restructuring agreement that was agreed on with a consortium of banks.[39]Pincar, Pininfarina's family holding company, announced on 24 March 2009 that it had hired investment bankLeonardo & Co.to find a buyer for its 50.6% stake in Pininfarina per the debt restructuring agreement reached in December.[40]In a statement released on 15 February 2012, the company said its debt repayment date had been extended to 2018, from 2015. And that the company would take advantage of interest rates "significantly lower than [current] market rates". Pininfarina will remain under the control of the Pininfarina family.[41]Pininfarina also saw its net revenue increase by a million.[42]

In 2013 Pininfarina managed a net profit with an operating loss of 8.2 million euros but a net profit of 32.9 million euros from a one-time gain of approximately 45 million euros.[43]

Acquisition by Mahindra group (2015–present)

edit

Mahindra Group,owner of Indian automobile companyMahindra & Mahindraagreed to buy Italian car designer Pininfarina SpA in a deal worth about 168 million euros.[2]

Mahindra group, together with affiliateTech Mahindra,has a 76% stake in the holding company Pincar for 25.3 million euros. TheIndian companywill offer the same price for the remaining stock. In addition to buying stock, Mahindra will invest 20 million euros in Pininfarina and provide a guarantee to creditors of 114.5 million euros.

Corporate governance (2016)

edit
  • President:Paolo Pininfarina
  • CEO – General Manager: Silvio Pietro Angori
  • Board of Directors: Gianfranco Albertini, Edoardo Garrone, Romina Guglielmetti, Licia Mattioli, Enrico Paraffini, Carlo Pavesio, Roberto Testore.
  • Statutory Auditors: Nicola Treves (president), Margherita Spaini, Giovanni Rayneri.

End of car production operations

edit

On 10 December 2011, Pininfarina announced it would end all automotive production. In truth, production ended in November 2010 with the conclusion of the contract to produce the Alfa Romeo Brera and Spider at the San Giorgio plant.[44]

Grugliasco factory

edit

Opened in 1958 with nearly 1,000 employees, by 1960 output exceeded 11,000 car bodies.[45]In 2009 Pininfarina sold the factory to Finpiemonte, the public finance of the Piedmont Region, at the price of 14.4 million euro. Finpiemonte, as part of the deal, leases the plant to Gian Mario Rossignolo at a rent per year for six years renewable.[46]

The Grugliasco sale did not include an adjacent structure that houses the wind tunnel.[47]

San Giorgio plant

edit
Pininfarina factory producing thePeugeot 406 CoupéinSan Giorgio Canavese,near Turin

Opened in 1986 to build Cadillac Allante bodies for General Motors,[48]the same year Pininfarina was first listed on the Stock Exchange in Milan. Automotive production ended at San Giorgio with the conclusion of the Ford production in July 2010 and the Alfa Romeo production in November 2010.[47]

Following the end of contract manufacturing activities, San Giorgio Canavese is being used to produce spare parts for cars manufactured in the past.[49]

Bairo Canavese

edit

Pininfarina opened its third manufacturing plant in 1997. Currently, Pininfarina leases the plant and 57 employees to theCecompGroup. This agreement to produce 4,000 electricBolloré Bluecarsruns from 1 April 2011 to 31 December 2013.[49]On 13 September 2013 a new lease agreement was announced, this new agreement will run from 1 January 2014 until the end of 2016.[50]

Uddevalla, Sweden Pininfarina Sverige AB

edit

A joint venture between Pininfarina S.p.A. andVolvo Car Corporationbegan in 2003. Volvo and Pininfarina S.p.A. have agreed to terminate the joint venture agreement regarding Pininfarina Sverige AB and its operations inUddevalla,Sweden. As of 31 December 2011, the termination of this agreement would result in a 30 million euros fee paid to Pininfarina.[49]

On 25 June 2013, the lastVolvo C70was produced and the Uddevalla assembly plant was closed.[51]

Notable designers

edit

Although Pininfarina rarely gave credit to individuals, many of the designers of the past have become known.[52]That policy seems to have changed in recent years.[53]As of 2021, Pininfarina had more than 700 employees.

Paolo Martinat work
Pietro Camardella drawing theFerrari Mythos

Vehicles

edit

Pininfarina designs, manufactures, assembles, and tests prototypes and production vehicles under contract for other automakers.

Past production

edit

As of 10 December 2011, Pininfarina announced it would end all mass automotive production with the sale of its 40% stake in the Uddevalla, Sweden plant to Volvo in 2013. In the past, Pininfarina produced cars and car bodies under contract from other automakers. This production includes Pininfarina-designed cars and vehicles designed by others.

Cars and car bodies manufactured at Pininfarina factories
Years Model Factory Quantity
1946–1949 Maserati A61500 Turismo 107 Corso Trapani 58[89]
1947–1952 Cisitalia 202 107 Corso Trapani 170
1947–1951 Alfa Romeo 6C2500 Super Cabriolet 107 Corso Trapani 64[90]
1948–1951 Alfa Romeo 6C2500 Super Sport Cabriolet 107 Corso Trapani 25–30[91]
1948–1951 Alfa Romeo 6C2500 S Berlina 107 Corso Trapani 80[92][93]
1948
Maserati A61500 Spider 107 Corso Trapani 2[94]
1950–1952 Lancia AureliaB50 Cabriolet 107 Corso Trapani 265
1950–1958 Lancia AureliaB20 Coupé 107 Corso Trapani 2,640[95]
1952
Alfa Romeo 6C2500 Sport 107 Corso Trapani 3[96]
1952
Alfa Romeo 1900C Cabriolet 107 Corso Trapani 88[97]
1952–1953 Alfa Romeo 1900C Coupé 107 Corso Trapani 100[98]
1952–1953 Ferrari 212 Intercabriolet 107 Corso Trapani 2[99]
1952–1953 Ferrari 212 Intercoupé 107 Corso Trapani 11[99]
1952–1953 Lancia D20 coupé 107 Corso Trapani 7[100]
1952–1954 Nash-Healey 107 Corso Trapani 402[101]
1953
Ferrari 375 MMSpider 107 Corso Trapani 15[102]
1953
Lancia D23 Spyder 107 Corso Trapani 4 (re-bodied D20s)[100][103]
1953–1954 Lancia D24Spyder 107 Corso Trapani 6[100][104]
1954–1955 Ferrari 250 Europa GT 107 Corso Trapani 28[105]
1954–1957 Fiat 1100TV Coupé 107 Corso Trapani 126[106]
1954–1955 Lancia AureliaB24 Spider America 107 Corso Trapani 240
1954
Lancia D25 Spyder 107 Corso Trapani 4 (re-bodied D24s)[100][107]
1954
Maserati A6GCS/53 Berlinetta 107 Corso Trapani 4[108]
1956
Lancia AureliaB24 Spider 107 Corso Trapani 521
1956–1958 Alfa Romeo GiuliettaSpider 107 Corso Trapani 5,493[109]
1957–1959 Lancia AppiaPinin Farina Coupé 2 +2 Series II 302
1958–1960 Ferrari 250 GT CoupéPinin Farina Grugliasco 353
1959–1962 Alfa Romeo GiuliettaSpider Grugliasco 11,503[110]
1959–1960 Cadillac Eldorado Brougham Grugliasco 200
1959–1967 Lancia FlaminiaCoupé Grugliasco 5,236[111]
1960–1963 Ferrari 250 GTE 2+2 Grugliasco 955 including prototypes[112]
1961–1968 Peugeot 404Coupé and Cabriolet Grugliasco 17,223 (10,389 Cabriolets, 6,834 Coupés)
1962–1971 Lancia FlaviaCoupé Grugliasco 26,084[113]
1962–1965 Alfa Romeo Giulia1600 Spider Grugliasco 10,336[114]
1963
Ferrari 330 America Grugliasco 50[115]
1964–1967 Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Grugliasco 1080[116]
1966–1968 Alfa Romeo Giulia Spider Duetto 1600 Spider Grugliasco 6,322[117]
1966–1968 Ferrari 330 GTC Grugliasco 604[118]
1966–1968 Ferrari 330 GTS Grugliasco 100[119]
1966–1985 Fiat 124 Sport Spider Grugliasco 198,120[120]
1966–1972 Fiat DinoSpider Grugliasco 1,583[121]
1967
Ferrari 330GTC Coupé Speciale Grugliasco 3[122]
1968–1972 Alfa Romeo Giulia Spider 1300 and 1600 Junior Grugliasco 4,913[123]
1968–1972 Alfa Romeo 1750 Spider Veloce Grugliasco 8,920[124]
1969–1983 Peugeot 504Coupé Grugliasco 22,975[125]
1969–1983 Peugeot 504Cabriolet Grugliasco 8,191[125]
1971–1972 Ferrari 365 GTC/4 Grugliasco 505[126]
1971–1975 Lancia 2000Coupé Grugliasco
1971–1976 Fiat 130Coupé Grugliasco 4,491[127]
1974–1981 Lancia Beta MontecarloCabrio Grugliasco 4,375
1975–1981 Lancia Beta MontecarloCoupé Grugliasco 3,203
1976–1984 Lancia GammaCoupé Grugliasco 6,790[127]
1976–1985 Ferrari 400 Grugliasco 1,808
1981–1984 Lancia BetaCoupé HPE Grugliasco 18,917[127]
1981
Lancia 037 Grugliasco 220
1981–1985 PeugeotTalbot Samba Cabriolet Grugliasco 13,062[128]
1981–1986 Fiat Campagnola Grugliasco 15,198[127]
1984–1993 Ferrari Testarossa Grugliasco / San Giorgio[129]
1984–1986 Alfa Romeo 33Giardinetta Grugliasco 12,238
1984–1993 Peugeot 205Cabriolet Grugliasco 72,125[130]
1985–1989 Ferrari 412 & 412 GT Grugliasco 576
1986–1993 Cadillac Allanté San Giorgio Canavese 21,430
1992–1996 Ferrari 456 GT 1435[127]
1993–2000 Fiat Coupé 72,762
1993–2002 Peugeot 306 San Giorgio Canavese 77,824[127]
1996–1999 Bentley AzureMark I Convertible 895[127]
1996–2000 Lancia KappaSW 9,208
1996–2004 Peugeot 406Coupé San Giorgio Canavese 107,633[127]
1999–2005 Mitsubishi Pajero Pinin Bairo Canavese and Grugliasco 68,555[131]
2000–2004 Alfa Romeo GTV& Spider 916 series San Giorgio Canavese 15,788[127]
2002
Pininfarina Argento Vivo 4–5
2002–2005 Ford Streetka Bairo Canavese 37,076[132]
2005
Ferrari P4/5 by Pininfarina 1
2005–2010 Alfa Romeo Brera San Giorgio Canavese 21,786
2006–2010 Alfa Romeo Spider San Giorgio Canavese 12,488
2006–2010 Ford FocusCoupé Cabriolet Bairo Canavese 36,374[133]
2006–2013 Volvo C70 II Uddevalla, Sweden
2006–2008 Mitsubishi Colt CZC Bairo Canavese 16,695

Notable car designs

edit

Pre-World War II

edit

Before the war Pininfarina built car bodies primarily for individual customers, many of the bodies were "one offs" and not mass-produced.

Concept cars, prototypes, and individual commissions

edit

In addition toproduction vehicles,Pininfarina createsprototype,show,andcustom carsforauto manufacturers,as well as private clients. Most prototypes—such as theFerrari Mythos,wereconcept cars,although several have become production models, including theFerrari 612 ScagliettiandFerrari F50.

A recent privately commissioned custom example was theFerrari P4/5of 2006, a one-car change to the exterior design of theEnzo Ferrariaccording to the client's specifications. Its design began in September 2005 with sketches byJason Castriotamoving through computer-aided sculpture and stringentwind tunneltesting. More than 200 components were designed especially for the car, including the engine, drivetrain, and other components modified from the original Enzo Ferrari. TheVehicle Identification Number(VIN) is unchanged from the Enzo it was derived from. The P4/5 was publicly revealed on 18 August 2006 at thePebble Beach Concours d'Eleganceand shown again at theParis Motor Showin late September. Another recent prototype is thePininfarina Nido,a two-seater sub-compact that could make airbags obsolete.

ThePininfarina B0solar-electric concept, designed withBolloréwas shown at the2008 Paris Motor Showfeaturing a range between charges of more than 150 miles (241 km) with an electronically limited 88-mile-per-hour (142 km/h) top speed, and an estimated acceleration to 37 miles per hour (60 km/h) in 6.3 seconds.[140]The car has solar panels on the roof and the nose, while its battery pack is said to last up to 125,000 miles (201,168 km).[141]

On 15 May 2013, Pininfarina announced the BMW Pininfarina Gran Lusso Coupé to be revealed on 24 May at the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este. Pininfarina announced this one-off concept car as the first collaboration between BMW and Pininfarina,[142]but in 1949 BMW commissioned Pininfarina design and build a pbuiltype of theBMW 501—it was rejected for being too modern.[143]

Production cars designed by Pininfarina

edit

A list of post-WWII cars designed by Pininfarina that went into production.

1962Ferrari 250 GT CoupéPinin Farina
IKA Torino380 W (1967) Argentina
Vinfast Lux A 2.0

Electric propulsion

edit
Pininfarina B0

Pininfarina has an area dedicated to the newelectric carPininfarina Bolloré. Batteries are produced by the FrenchBolloré Group.[245]

Pininfarina has introduced its electric vehicle concept, thePininfarina B0(pronounced "B Zero" ). The four-seat hatchback features a solid-state lithium-polymer battery, supercapacitors, and a roof-integrated solar panel to achieve a range of 153 miles (246 km). Developed in partnership with theBolloré Group,the vehicle was slated for limited production in 2009 as theBolloré Bluecar.[246]

Pininfarina displayed a turbine-poweredplug-in hybridcalled the Cambiano at the2012 Geneva Motor Show.[247]

At the2016 Geneva Motor ShowPininfarina revealed theH2 Speed,an electric sports car concept.[248]The H2 Speed is ahydrogen vehiclewith two race-specification electric motors which are fed by ahydrogen fuel cell.[249]The hydrogen power unit was designed by Swiss company GreenGT.[250]

Automobili Pininfarina Battista

edit
Pininfarina Battista

On 27 November 2018, it was announced thatAutomobili Pininfarinahad invested over €20m in Pininfarina design services to support plans for its range of luxury electric cars.[251]This includes design and engineering services for the first Pininfarina-branded performance car which is a luxury electric sports car called theBattista(named after company founder Battista 'Pinin' Farina and originally codenamed PF0).[252]With four electric motors, the car is supposed to be able to reach 100 km/h (62 mph) from a standstill in under two seconds with a top speed of 350 km/h (217 mph).[253]Automobili Pininfarina plans to reveal the car at the2019 Geneva Motor Show.[253]Further details on the Battista surfaced on 4 March 2019. It has 1900 horsepower, and only 150 will be built. It is also related to theRimac C Two.[254]

Additional work

edit

In 2018, Pininfarina also worked with Mahindra to produce the Furio mass transport truck.[255]In 2020, Pininfarina received four Good Design awards for its automotive creations, including the AutoNomia, an autonomous driving simulator, and the Green Motion Residenza electric car refueling station.[256]In 2021, the company debuted its Teorema style of electric vehicle for autonomous driving, that uses the space where a wheel is generally stationed in most cars for additional seating room.[257]They also partnered with Gaussin to create the H2 Racing Truck.[258] In 2022, Pininfarina expanding its retail partner network in North America to include shops in Chicago[259]and Orange County.[260]

Other vehicles

edit

Nautical design

edit
  • Primatist Aerotop Pininfarina range:[261]G46, G53, B62,[262]G70.
  • Magnum Marine80' Series[263]
  • Pershing88' Pininfarina Limited Edition, a one-off body designed by Pininfarina. Yacht was used in a Visa Black Card commercial.[264]
  • FincantieriOttantacinque by Pininfarina Project.[265]
  • Schaefer 620 and 800 by Pininfarina, interiors.[266]
  • Schaefer 510 GT Pininfarina.[267]
  • Persico Marine WallyCento Project.[268]
  • Azimut65 Pininfarina.
  • Azimut Atlantic Challenger.[269]
  • Persico F70[270]
  • Oceanco Kairos By Pininfarina[271]
  • Princess X95, X85, V55, R35[272]
  • Aurea[273]
  • Super Sport 65[274]
  • Persico Fly40

Mass transport

edit
2000Mercedes-Benz O405GHispano Habit
1991–1997Re 460locomotive andIC 2000train

Collaborations

edit

Pininfarina has worked within the nautical sector, collaborating with Beneteau,[281]Primatist,[282]Fincantieri,[283]Schaefer,[284]Persico Marine,[285]Wally,[286]and Princess.[287]Pininfarina designed the external livery and interiors of the Eurostar’s e320 train in 2015.[288]Pininfarina was also involved with the design of the new Leitner Station.[289]

Pininfarina designed the Costa Coffee CEM-200 Marlow Self-Serve Espresso Bar.[290]and the Coca-Cola Freestyle.[291]They also partnered with Bovet 1822 on the Flying Tourbillon wristwatch, creating the Bovet by Pininfarina Collection,[292]in addition to Chivas Regal to produce a limited edition 18-year-old scotch whisky.[293]In 2018, Pininfarina partnered with De Rosa to produce the Metamorphosis bicycle.[294]In 2015, Pininfarina partnered with Hexagon Partners to produce the Global Evo CMM.[295]In 2017, the company partnered with Cisco to design the Catalyst 9000 switch.[296]Pininfarina was asked to design a new spray gun for Anest Iwata, creating the Supernova Pininfarina. In 2021, Pininfarina created the “straddle tractor concept” for use in grapevine picking operations.[297]

Other works

edit
Bicycle designed by Pininfarina

Pininfarina also works with other companies such asSimpleTechfor product design.[298]

Other Pininfarina product designs include the2006 Winter Olympicstorch,cauldronand medals, as well asmajor appliancecollections forGorenje.[299]

In December 1999, Pininfarina cooperated withCasioand designed a watch under its label, theG-ShockGE-2000.[300]However, the watch received criticism due to its weak strap, which was vulnerable to breaking during regular use.[301]

Pininfarina logo on Coca-Cola Freestyle machine

Pininfarina was a design contractor for the development of theCoca-Cola Freestyledrinks dispenser.[302][303]

Pininfarina was asked to design a new spray gun for Anest Iwata, creating the Supernova Pininfarina.

Pininfarina designed the1100 MillecentoResidences interiors inMiami, Floridain 2012[304]and the beachwalk waterfront residences interiors inHallandale Beach, Floridain 2013.[305]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^"Pininfarina S.p.A. Annual Financial Report"(PDF).13 August 2021.Retrieved13 August2021.
  2. ^abPhilip, Siddharth Vikram; Ebhardt, Tommaso (14 December 2015)."Mahindra Agrees to Purchase of Car-Designer Pininfarina".Bloomberg.Retrieved8 April2016.
  3. ^ab"Pininfarina Group: Appointments of New Officers and New Assignments in the Sign of Corporate Continuity"(PDF)(Press release). Pininfarina Group. 12 August 2008. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 18 October 2014.Retrieved19 June2014.
  4. ^abcdBorgeson, Griff (December 1963). "Pininfarina man, myth, & monopoly".Road & Track.pp. 37–38.
  5. ^"Pininfarina SpA".companyspotlight.2013.Retrieved29 May2013.
  6. ^"Pininafarina Anniversary".concorsodeleganzavilladeste.Archived fromthe originalon 10 January 2014.Retrieved29 May2013.
  7. ^"Pinin Farina 1930".classiccarcatalogue.Retrieved29 May2013.
  8. ^abcBorgeson, Griff (March 1964). "Pininfarina, The New Generation".Road & Track.p. 83.
  9. ^Vitello, Paul (3 July 2012)."Sergio Pininfarina, 85, Designer of Sports Cars".The New York Times.
  10. ^"History of the Paris Motor Show – 2006".Motorshow.cars.uk.msn.Archived fromthe originalon 2 June 2013.Retrieved29 May2013.
  11. ^Caballo, Ernesto (1993).Pininfarina: Born with the automobile.Milan: Automobilia. p. 16.ISBN9788879600521.
  12. ^Thompson, Jonathan (March 1976). "The Early Pininfarina Line".Road & Track.p. 37.
  13. ^Stigh, Daniela (6 April 2012)."Five for Friday (Plus One): MoMA's Car Collection".MoMA.Retrieved29 May2013.
  14. ^Adolphus, David Traver (1 May 2008)."Days of Ferrari 2008, Day 3: 1952 Ferrari 212 Inter Coupe PF".Hemmings.Retrieved14 July2022.
  15. ^ab"Divorce, Italian style? No, but a design change at Ferrari".Automotive News Europe.28 March 2013.Retrieved19 June2014.
  16. ^Thompson, Jonathan (December 1976). "The Early Pininfarina Line".Road & Track.p. 54.
  17. ^Gino Rancati, Pininfarina n. 12 1972–73, p.162
  18. ^Ready, Owen (5 March 2013)."Pininfarina Sergio concept".cardesignnews.Archived fromthe originalon 27 May 2013.Retrieved29 May2013.
  19. ^Perkins, Chris (16 February 2017)."Ferrari No Longer Sells a Car Designed by Pininfarina".Road & Track.Retrieved28 January2023.
  20. ^Wilson, Evan (1983),Alfa Romeo Giulietta: 750 and 101 series Giuliettas and Giulias, 1954–1965,Osprey Publishing, p. 43,ISBN978-0850454963
  21. ^"Battista Pininfarina Is Dead – Pioneer Automobile Designer"(PDF).The New York Times.3 April 1966.Retrieved8 April2016.
  22. ^https:// linkedin /company/pininfarina/[bare URL]
  23. ^"Pininfarina History – The Story of Battista Farina".Archived fromthe originalon 30 October 2013.Retrieved19 June2014.
  24. ^ab"Pininfarina – Coach Builder Information".conceptcarz.Retrieved20 May2013.
  25. ^[1]"30 years at the GM wind tunnel".VideoatGM. Archived fromthe originalon 3 May 2022.Retrieved29 May2013.
  26. ^Klassen, Robert; Menor, Larry J. (2006).Cases in Operations Management: Building Customer Value Through World-Class Operations.Thousand Oaks, California: Sage. p. 12.ISBN978-1-4129-1371-3.Retrieved29 April2013.
  27. ^Klassen, Robert; Menor, Larry J. (2006).Cases in Operations Management: Building Customer Value Through World-Class Operations.Thousand Oaks, California: Sage. p. 15.ISBN978-1-4129-1371-3.Retrieved29 April2013.
  28. ^Pininfarina Annual Report.Pininfarina. 2004. p. 10.
  29. ^"Cyrela by Pininfarina".dexigner.17 September 2014.Retrieved9 January2024.
  30. ^Madigan, Nick (17 April 2015)."Ferrari Interiors for a Miami Condo".The New York Times.Retrieved9 January2024.
  31. ^"Torre Designo by Pininfarina".architectmagazine.29 July 2022.Retrieved17 August2024.
  32. ^"Pininfarina Designs Its First Architectural Project in China".Yahoo Finance.20 March 2017.Retrieved9 January2024.
  33. ^"Pininfarina and AECOM design Istanbul airport air-traffic control tower".Dezeen.24 December 2015.Retrieved9 January2024.
  34. ^"Pininfarina home design collaborates with reflex for modular segno collection".designboom.10 May 2016.Retrieved9 January2024.
  35. ^Stecher, Nicolas (14 August 2021)."Pininfarina (Yes, the Car Designer) Has a New Flooring Collection Made for Indoor-Outdoor Living".Robb Report.Retrieved9 January2024.
  36. ^"Pininfarina Designs Its First Architectural Project in China".Yahoo Finance.20 March 2017.Retrieved9 January2024.
  37. ^Ciferri, Luca (28 August 2008)."Tata wants part of Pininfarina".Automotive News Europe. Archived fromthe originalon 28 June 2013.Retrieved19 June2014.
  38. ^Ireson, Nelson (29 April 2008)."Update: Ferrari, Brembo and Sabelt invest in Pininfarina".Motorauthority.Retrieved29 May2013.
  39. ^Boland, Vincent (1 January 2009)."Pininfarina family to sell stake in car group"(fee required).Financial Times.Archivedfrom the original on 11 December 2022.Retrieved29 May2013.
  40. ^Patrascu, Daniel (24 March 2009)."Pininfarina to Get New Owner, Focus on Electric Cars".Autoevolution.Retrieved29 May2013.
  41. ^Cambieri, Giulia (16 February 2012)."Family business roundup: Pininfarina remains family-controlled while De Tomaso is sold".Campden FB.Retrieved29 May2013.
  42. ^Bowman, Zach (16 May 2012)."Pininfarina turns first net profit since 2004".Autoblog.Retrieved29 May2013.
  43. ^Ramsey, Jonathon (26 March 2013)."Pininfarina in the black for first time since 2004".Autoblog.Retrieved17 August2014.
  44. ^"Pininfarina – Stop alla produzione e mobilità per 127 addetti".Quattroruote.it(in Italian). Archived fromthe originalon 19 April 2012.Retrieved30 May2013.
  45. ^"Pininfarina History".Retro-speed.co.uk.Retrieved17 August2014.
  46. ^"Titolo Pagina".Torino.repubblica.it. Archived fromthe originalon 19 August 2014.Retrieved30 May2013.
  47. ^ab2010 annual report p13
  48. ^Kurt, Ernst."Lost Cars of the 1980s – Cadillac Allante".Hemmings.Retrieved19 June2014.
  49. ^abc2011 annual report p69
  50. ^"Bollore': intesa con Pininfarina per produzione Bluecar fino a 2016, verso filiale italiana".corriere.it.Retrieved3 February2014.
  51. ^Bolduc, Douglas A."Three bad days for European car plants – and more to come".Automotive News.Retrieved5 December2013.
  52. ^Lewin, Tony Autor; Borroff, Ryan (2010).How to: Design Cars Like a Pro: AA Comprehensive Guide to Car Design from the Top Professionals.p. 158.
  53. ^ab"A Life of Style".The Auto Channel.Retrieved19 June2014.
  54. ^Strohl, Daniel."Franco Scaglione: Unsung Master of Aerodynamic Design".Hemmings.Retrieved28 March2014.
  55. ^ab"Designing Motion. Automotive Designers 1890 to 1990".5 January 2017.
  56. ^Caspers, Markus (1 January 2017).Designing Motion: Automotive Designers 1890 to 1990.Birkhäuser. p. 154.ISBN978-3035607840.
  57. ^Chierici, Sergio (7 September 2006)."Un grande Maestro di design: Aldo Brovarone"[A Great Design Master: Aldo Brovarone].Virtualcar.it(in Italian). Archived fromthe originalon 22 April 2016.
  58. ^Stevens, Peter."s this one of the very best Pininfarina concept cars?".Retrieved30 August2017.
  59. ^"1986 Alfa Romeo Vivace Coupe and Spider (Pininfarina) – Studios".carstyling.ru.Retrieved30 August2017.
  60. ^"Pininfarina Ferrari Pinin concept 1980".coachbuild.Retrieved30 August2017.
  61. ^Nerozzi, Barbara, ed. (January–February 1992). "The Suppliers".GB Progetti:48.
  62. ^"1986 Ferrari Testa Rossa by Gaston Andrey Motorsports".Archived fromthe originalon 30 August 2017.Retrieved30 August2017.
  63. ^"Giles Taylor is new Rolls-Royce Design Director".carbodydesign.Retrieved30 August2017.
  64. ^"Ian Cameron".sparkawards.Archived fromthe originalon 30 June 2013.Retrieved15 May2013.
  65. ^"Pierangelo Andreani".andreanidesign.Retrieved20 June2021.
  66. ^D'Aprile."Elvio Elvio D'Aprile".Linkedin.Retrieved16 May2013.
  67. ^"Autonews Europe".Retrieved30 August2017.
  68. ^"Interview met designchef Marco Tencone over de nieuwe Lancia Ypsilon".EdizioneMedia(in Dutch). 30 June 2011.Retrieved8 April2016.
  69. ^"Maurizio Corbi".AutomotiveArtists.Retrieved30 August2017.
  70. ^"Maurizio Corbi"(PDF).corbistudios.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 19 August 2016.Retrieved19 June2014.
  71. ^"Auto industry: Davide Arcangeli (designer of BMW 5 Series (E60))".12 October 2011.Retrieved30 August2017.
  72. ^"BMW Car Designers throughout history".BMWism.2013. Archived fromthe originalon 18 October 2012.Retrieved8 April2016.
  73. ^Gonzales, Zy (16 October 2012)."Design Icon: Pininfarina".Retrieved30 August2017.
  74. ^"Goran Popović".automotivedesignconference.Retrieved12 October2021.
  75. ^"Jeremy Malick".linkedin.Archived fromthe originalon 14 February 2014.Retrieved14 February2014.
  76. ^"Dimitri Vicedomini".linkedin.Archived fromthe originalon 14 February 2014.Retrieved14 February2014.
  77. ^"Luca Borgogno".linkedin. Archived fromthe originalon 14 February 2014.Retrieved14 February2014.
  78. ^"Nazzareno Epifani".Linkedin. Archived fromthe originalon 14 February 2014.Retrieved14 February2014.
  79. ^"Nazzareno Epifani".6 March 2019.
  80. ^"Nazzareno Epifani".10 September 2019.
  81. ^"Pininfarina designer Brano Mauks presents the Sergio Concept".carbodydesign.Retrieved30 August2017.
  82. ^"Brano Mauks".Linkedin. Archived fromthe originalon 14 February 2014.Retrieved14 February2014.
  83. ^"Carlo Palazzani".Linkedin. Archived fromthe originalon 14 February 2014.Retrieved14 February2014.
  84. ^"Felix Kilbertus".Retrieved30 August2017– via Linkedin.
  85. ^"Felix Kilbertus".Linkedin. Archived fromthe originalon 14 February 2014.Retrieved14 February2014.
  86. ^abGallina, Eric (4 January 2017)."Pininfarina prepares to reboot with former PSA designer".Automotive News Europe.Retrieved30 August2017.
  87. ^"Rustom Mazda".linkedin.Retrieved16 October2022.
  88. ^"Carlo Bonzanigo".linkedin.Retrieved30 August2017.
  89. ^"Maserati Sports Cars".auto.howstuffworks.20 May 2007.Retrieved14 July2022.
  90. ^"Blue survivor: 1949 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 Cabriolet Pininfarina".Classic Virus. 29 January 2013.Retrieved17 August2014.
  91. ^Melissen, Wouter."Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 SS Pinin Farina Cabriolet".ultimatecarpage.Retrieved28 April2013.
  92. ^"1951 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 S Berlina by Pinin Farina".rmsothebys.Retrieved24 August2020.
  93. ^Breeze, Joe."Bella Berlina – Is this Alfa Romeo 6C the most beautiful saloon ever made?".classicdriver.Retrieved14 July2022.
  94. ^"1948 Maserati A6 1500 Spider Pininfarina".automobile-catalog.Retrieved5 December2013.
  95. ^Goldberg, Geoff."Collectors Corner – Lancia B20 GT – The classic Gran Turismo Coupe".anamera.Retrieved5 May2013.
  96. ^"Design daughter: 1952 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 Sport by Pininfarina".classicvirus.24 July 2019.Retrieved28 October2020.
  97. ^Garcia, Gonzalo Alvarez (1983).Alfa Romeo 1900 Sprint.Milano, Italy: Edizioni della Libreria dell'Automoble. p. 86.ASINB003B5M3SI.Archived fromthe originalon 8 May 2014.Retrieved18 August2014.
  98. ^Garcia, Gonzalo Alvarez (1983).Alfa Romeo 1900 Sprint.Milano, Italy: Edizioni della Libreria dell'Automoble. p. 88.ASINB003B5M3SI.Archived fromthe originalon 8 May 2014.Retrieved18 August2014.
  99. ^ab"1952 Ferrari 212 Inter Images, Information and History (Road)".Conceptcarz. 11 October 1952.Retrieved30 May2013.
  100. ^abcdCezar, Luis."Lancia D20 & D24".autoclassic.Portal AutoClassic. Archived fromthe originalon 3 February 2014.Retrieved3 February2014.
  101. ^McCourt, Mark J. (September 2008)."1952–'53 Nash-Healey: America's First Post-War Sportster was a Truly International Affair".Hemmings Motor News.Retrieved22 April2013.
  102. ^Cupler, Justin (11 May 2012)."1953 Ferrari 375 MM Spider By Pininfarina".topspeed.Retrieved5 May2013.
  103. ^Melissen, Wouter."Lancia D23 Sport Pinin Farina Spyder".ultimatecarpage.Retrieved17 August2014.
  104. ^Melissen, Wouter."Lancia D24 Sport Pinin Farina Spyder".ultimatecarpage.Retrieved17 August2014.
  105. ^Melissen, Wouter."Ferrari 250 Europa GT Coupe".ultimatecarpage.Retrieved3 March2017.
  106. ^"1957 Fiat 1100 Turismo Veloce Images, Information and History (1100 TV)".Conceptcarz.Retrieved30 May2013.
  107. ^Melissen, Wouter."D25 Sport Pinin Farina Spyder".ultimatecarpage.Retrieved17 August2014.
  108. ^"Maserati A6 GCS/53 Pinin Farina Berlinetta".Ultimatecarpage. Archived fromthe originalon 12 February 2009.Retrieved5 December2013.
  109. ^Fusi, Luigi (1978).Alfa Romeo All Cars From 1910.Milano: emmeti grafica. pp. 857–858.
  110. ^Fusi, Luigi (1978).Alfa Romeo All Cars From 1910.Milano, Italy: emmeti grafica. pp. 858–859.
  111. ^Ritzinger, Andre."Lancia Coupes & Convertibles 1950 – 1980".Ritzsite.nl.Retrieved17 August2014.
  112. ^Boe, Alan (April 1982)."The 250 GTE The First Family Ferrari"(PDF).Car Collector and Car Classics.p. 21. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 11 January 2016.Retrieved17 September2014.
  113. ^"Lancia Flavia Coupe (1962–1970)".honestjohn.co.uk.Retrieved26 December2013.
  114. ^Fusi, Luigi (1978).Alfa Romeo All Cars From 1910.Milano: emmeti grafica. pp. 862–863.
  115. ^Daniel, Vaughan."1963 Ferrari 330 America".conceptcarz.Retrieved28 March2014.
  116. ^"1964 330 GT 2+2".auto.ferrari.Retrieved17 August2014.
  117. ^Fusi, Luigi (1978).Alfa Romeo All Cars From 1910.Milano: emmeti grafica. p. 864.
  118. ^Owen, Richard Michael (17 April 2016)."1966→1968 Ferrari 330 GTC".supercars.net.Retrieved28 March2014.
  119. ^"GT 330 2+2: Luxury open sports cars".FIAT Group.Retrieved28 March2014.
  120. ^Westen, Anthony."Fiat 124 Spider Blog".Anthony Westen.Retrieved17 May2013.
  121. ^"1969 Fiat Dino – Classic Car Price Guide".The Hagerty Group.Retrieved26 December2013.
  122. ^Melissen, Wouter."Ferrari 330 GTC Coupe Speciale".ultimatecarpage.Retrieved17 August2014.
  123. ^Fusi, Luigi (1978).Alfa Romeo All Cars From 1910.Milano: emmeti grafica. pp. 864–866.
  124. ^Fusi, Luigi (1978).Alfa Romeo All Cars From 1910.Milano: emmeti grafica. pp. 868–870.
  125. ^abBaron, Philippe (28 August 2015)."Peugeot 504 Coupé & Cabriolet (1969–1983)".stubs-auto.fr(in French).Retrieved14 July2022.
  126. ^"Ferrari 365 GTC/4 Detailed Information".365gtc4.Retrieved30 May2013.
  127. ^abcdefghi"PRODUZIONE COMPLESSIVA"(PDF).pininfarina.it.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 5 June 2011.Retrieved3 August2007.
  128. ^"Development of theTalbot Samba cars".Rootes-chrysler.co.uk. 6 February 2007.Retrieved30 May2013.
  129. ^Nerozzi, Barbara, ed. (January–February 1992). "The Suppliers".GB Progetti:104–122.
  130. ^"Missing".Archived fromthe originalon 13 August 2016.
  131. ^Pininfarina Annual Report 1999–2005
  132. ^"Streetka Production figures".TalkFord. 19 July 2006.Retrieved18 August2014.
  133. ^Pininfarina 2006–2010 Annual Reports
  134. ^ab"Pininfarina".Solarnavigator.net.Retrieved30 May2013.
  135. ^"AUTOMOTIVE HISTORY: Pininfarina".Automotive-history.blogspot. Archived fromthe originalon 28 June 2013.Retrieved30 May2013.
  136. ^"6c 2300 B Lungo #814047 Lukas Hüni AG".Alfa Bulletin Board. 26 February 2013.Retrieved19 June2014.
  137. ^"1936 Lancia Astura Images, Information and History".Conceptcarz. 29 November 2012.Retrieved30 May2013.
  138. ^Lombard, Stefan (2006-07-28). "Most Expensive Collectible Cars – No. 10: 1937 Alfa Romeo 8C 2900". Connoisseur's Guide – Most Expensive Collectible Cars. Forbes. Retrieved 2012-02-18
  139. ^Thatcher, Sharon (21 July 2010)."An Alfa Romeo mystery".old cars weekly.Retrieved29 April2013.
  140. ^Lienert, Paul."2008 Paris Auto Show: Pininfarina B0".Edmunds Inside Line.Archived fromthe originalon 28 July 2009.Retrieved19 June2014.
  141. ^"The Pininfarina BO Electric Car".India.6 October 2008. Archived fromthe originalon 29 January 2009.Retrieved19 June2014.
  142. ^Fiordelisi, Francesco."At Villa d'Este world debut for the BMW Pininfarina Gran Lusso Coupé"(PDF).Pininfarina.Retrieved29 May2013.
  143. ^"Postmodernism 1949 -1960: new ideas within the mindset of the past, comfort and beauty".bmwism.Archived fromthe originalon 18 October 2012.Retrieved29 May2013.
  144. ^Maronese, Nicholas."How Pininfarina gave France the middle finger with this Alfa Romeo".autofocus.ca.Retrieved12 March2018.
  145. ^Golfen, Bob (8 October 2015)."Historic Lancia prototype by 'Pinin' Farina to Dragone auction".journal.classiccars.Retrieved12 March2018.
  146. ^"1947 Delahaye 135MS Coupe Coachwork by Pinin Farina".bonhams.Retrieved12 March2018.
  147. ^"Pics & vids: Schloß Dyck Classic Days 2009".coachbuild.Retrieved29 April2013.
  148. ^abcdMelissen, Wouter."Lancia Aurelia B52 PF200 Cabriolet".ultimatecarpage.Retrieved1 June2013.
  149. ^abcdeit:Lancia Aurelia autotelai
  150. ^"In deep".pininfarina.Retrieved2 June2013.
  151. ^Tahaney, Ed (21 August 2017)."Restored 1954 Jaguar XK120 SE Debuts at 2017 Pebble Beach Concours".Automobile Magazine.Retrieved14 July2022.
  152. ^ab"Aldo Brovarone".Studiotorino. Archived fromthe originalon 30 June 2018.
  153. ^"1955 Nash Special (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved8 April2016.
  154. ^abcd"Pininfarina Alfa Romeo 6C 3000 CM Super Flow".Coachbuild.Com. Archived fromthe originalon 3 October 2011.Retrieved19 June2014.
  155. ^Foster, Pat (September 2005)."Pinin Farina's Rambler Palm Beach".Hemmings Classic Car.Retrieved8 April2016.
  156. ^"The Fiat-Abarth Bertone record car".Ugofadini.21 December 2007.Retrieved8 April2016.
  157. ^Conceptcarz page on Cadillac "Jacqueline",retrieved on 17 December 2010.
  158. ^Melissen, Wouter."Ferrari 250 GT Pininfarina Coupe Speciale".ultimatecarpage.Retrieved8 January2014.
  159. ^"1962 Fiat 2300 Coupe Speciale (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  160. ^"1963 Chevrolet Corvair Super Spyder Coupé".Conceptcarz.Retrieved17 August2014.
  161. ^"1963 Chevrolet Corvette Rondine Coupé".Conceptcarz.Retrieved17 August2014.
  162. ^"Fiat 2300 Cabriolet Speciale (Italy)".allcarindex.Retrieved19 June2014.
  163. ^"1964 Fiat 2300 S Coupe Speciale".carstyling.ru.Retrieved19 June2014.
  164. ^"1963 Pininfarina PF Sigma".allcarindex.Retrieved19 June2014.
  165. ^"Ferrari 206 P Dino Pininfarina Berlinetta Speciale".ultimatecarpage.Retrieved19 June2014.
  166. ^Melissen, Wouter."Ferrari 250 LM Pininfarina Stradale Speciale".Ultimatecarpage.Retrieved6 February2014.
  167. ^"Fiat 2300 S Coupe Speciale 1965 designed by Pininfarina".autowp.ru. Archived fromthe originalon 6 July 2013.Retrieved17 August2014.
  168. ^"1965 Ferrari 365P Berlinetta Speciale Luigi" Coco "Chinetti's three-seater prototype".European Car Magazine.Archived fromthe originalon 29 November 2013.Retrieved30 May2013.
  169. ^"Concepts and prototypes: Pininfarina BMC 1800 Aerodynamica concept (1967)".aronline.co.uk.19 July 2022.Retrieved7 April2024.
  170. ^Rees, Chris."Pininfarina's Greatest Car Designs".Archived fromthe originalon 12 September 2012.Retrieved30 May2013.
  171. ^"Meadow Brook Concours 2009: 1967 Ferrari Dino 206 Competizione by Pininfarina".Retrieved31 May2013.
  172. ^"Fiat Dino Parigi (Italy)".allcarindex.Retrieved19 June2014.
  173. ^"1968 Bentley T1 Coupe Speciale".carstyling.ru.Retrieved19 June2014.
  174. ^"BLMC 1100 Aerodinamica".carrozzieri-italiani.Retrieved7 April2024.
  175. ^Fusi, Luigi.Alfa Romeo All Cars From 1910.Emmetigrafica, 1978, p. 687.
  176. ^"1968 Ferrari P6 (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved19 June2014.
  177. ^"1968 Pininfarina MG EX.234".webcarstory.Retrieved29 May2013.
  178. ^"1968 Ferrari 250 P5".ferraridatabase.Retrieved17 August2014.
  179. ^"1969 Abarth 2000 Pininfarina Coupe Concept specifications".automobile-catalog.Retrieved31 May2013.
  180. ^abFusi, Luigi.Alfa Romeo All Cars From 1910.Emmetigrafica, 1978, p. 688.
  181. ^"1969 Pininfarina Sigma Grand Prix monoposto F1".carstyling.ru.Retrieved19 June2014.
  182. ^"1969 Ferrari 512 S Berlinetta Speciale".Retrieved30 May2013.
  183. ^"1969 Fiat 128 Teenager (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved19 June2014.
  184. ^"Concept Cars".webcarstory.Retrieved29 May2013.
  185. ^Petrány, Máté (18 March 2015)."Pininfarina And Mercedes-Benz Never Talk About This 6.3 Bastard Child".Jalopnik.Retrieved2 March2021.
  186. ^"The 504 Model Range".garage24.net.Retrieved31 May2013.
  187. ^"Pininfarina NSU Ro 80 designed by Paolo Martin".madle.org.Retrieved31 May2013.
  188. ^Dinarich, Mario.Style Auto Quarterly.Style Auto Editrice s.n.c., April–May–June 1973, p. 26.
  189. ^"Missing".Concept Cars – Passato, Presente e Futuro del Car Design. Archived fromthe originalon 29 December 2010.Retrieved31 May2013.
  190. ^"Chevrolet Corvette XP-897 GT".lotusespritturbo.Retrieved31 May2013.
  191. ^"1974 Ferraris CR 25".Ferraridatabase.Retrieved17 August2014.
  192. ^"1974 Fiat 130 Maremma (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved19 June2014.
  193. ^"Fiat 130 Opera".quattro-porte.Retrieved19 June2014.
  194. ^"1978 Fiat Ecos (Pininfarina)".ecopolis.org.Archived fromthe originalon 28 August 2008.Retrieved17 August2014.
  195. ^"Classic Concepts: 1978 Jaguar XJ Spider by Pininfarina".3 February 2012. Archived fromthe originalon 5 January 2013.Retrieved14 July2022.
  196. ^"Gamma Spider".carsfromitaly.net.Retrieved19 June2014.
  197. ^Thompson, Rufus."Concept Car of the Week: Pininfarina CNR-PF (1978)".cardesignnews. Archived fromthe originalon 6 November 2012.Retrieved30 May2013.
  198. ^"1980 Lancia Gamma Scala".Christie's.Retrieved19 June2014.
  199. ^"1981 Audi Quartz (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved19 June2014.
  200. ^"Gamma Olgiata".carsfromitaly.net.Retrieved19 June2014.
  201. ^"Pininfarina Brio (Italy)".allcarindex.Retrieved19 June2014.
  202. ^"1984 Honda HP-X concept".conceptcarz.Retrieved17 August2014.
  203. ^"1985 Peugeot Griffe 4 (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved19 June2014.
  204. ^"1986 Alfa Romeo Vivace Coupe and Spider (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved19 June2014.
  205. ^"1988 Lancia HIT (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved19 June2014.
  206. ^"Pininfarina CNR E2 (Italy)".allcarindex.Retrieved19 June2014.
  207. ^"1991 Opel Chronos".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  208. ^"1992 Pininfarina Fiat Cinquecento 4x4 pick-up".webcarstory.Retrieved17 August2014.
  209. ^"1992 Pininfarina Ethos".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  210. ^"1993 Pininfarina Ethos 2".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  211. ^"1994 Fiat Spunto (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  212. ^"1994 Pininfarina Ethos 3".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  213. ^Simanaitis, Dennis (18 September 2012)."Honda Argento Vito by Pininfarina".simanaitissays.Retrieved30 May2013.
  214. ^"1995 Honda SSM (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  215. ^"1996 Fiat Sing e Song (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  216. ^"1996 Pininfarina Eta Beta".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  217. ^"1997 Peugeot Nautilus (Pininfarina)".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  218. ^"Collaborations – Fiat".Pininfarina.Retrieved31 May2013.
  219. ^Perini, Giancarlo."Much more than just a cubic metro".cardesign.to.Archived fromthe originalon 19 August 2014.Retrieved30 May2013.
  220. ^Simona (25 February 2007)."2000 Ferrari Rossa By Pininfarina".TopSpeed.Retrieved31 May2013.
  221. ^KIINO, RON."Pininfarina Start 2001 Frankfurt Auto Show".Car and Driver.Retrieved30 May2013.
  222. ^Giancarlo, Perini."Pininfarina develops two new Chinese cars".Car Design News. Archived fromthe originalon 28 June 2013.Retrieved30 May2013.
  223. ^"2003 Lotus Enjoy Concept".conceptcarz.Retrieved17 August2014.
  224. ^abEllison, Edd (12 October 2004)."Over the last fortnight."italiaspeed.Retrieved17 August2014.
  225. ^"Saturn Curve".ultimatecarpage.Retrieved17 August2014.
  226. ^Keegan, Walter J. Jr."Chery M14 wins" Best New Car in Show "".autoblog.Retrieved17 August2014.
  227. ^"Ferrari 612 Scaglietti" K "by Pininfarina".Pininfarina.Retrieved30 May2013.
  228. ^"Concept car Sintesi".Pininfarina.Retrieved17 August2014.
  229. ^McCausland, Evan (11 December 2009)."Ferrari Builds One-Off P540 Superfast Aperta".Automobile Magazine.Retrieved14 February2014.
  230. ^"AUSmotive – Pininfarina to woo Alfa Romeo with Spider Concept",retrieved on 6 February 2010.
  231. ^Ramsey, Jonathon (25 August 2010)."Michael Stoschek's Wild Child: the New Lancia Stratos".stylelist AOL. Archived fromthe originalon 30 December 2010.Retrieved5 September2011.
  232. ^"2010 Pininfarina Nido EV".carstyling.ru.Retrieved17 August2014.
  233. ^Deacon, Clinton."Eric Clapton's Ferrari SP12 EPC caught on video".worldcarfans.Retrieved17 August2014.
  234. ^Ciferri, Luca (1 March 2016)."Hydrogen Pininfarina concept wants to make your race track green".autoweek.Retrieved8 April2016.
  235. ^Duffey, Michael."1951 Simca 8 Super Sport".Sports Car Market Magazine.Archived fromthe originalon 13 June 2013.Retrieved17 August2014.
  236. ^"1952–1954 Nash Ambassador and Statesman".auto.howstuffworks.13 September 2007. Archived fromthe originalon 27 August 2019.Retrieved14 July2022.
  237. ^"1952 Nash-Healey".auto.howstuffworks.27 October 2007. Archived fromthe originalon 26 January 2020.Retrieved14 July2022.
  238. ^Fusi, Luigi (1978).Alfa Romeo All Cars From 1910.Emmetigrafica. p. 527.
  239. ^"Lancia Beta HPE".fcaheritage.Retrieved19 March2024.
  240. ^Lamm, John (23 October 2013)."And the Beat Goes On: Honda Bringing S660 Concept to Tokyo [2013 Tokyo Auto Show]".Car & Driver.Retrieved17 August2014.
  241. ^"Two car models for China signed by Pininfarina the A3 and the A3 Sport".Pininfarina.Retrieved17 August2014.
  242. ^Weiner, Eric (12 February 2014)."Ferrari California T Set for 2014 Geneva Auto Show Debut".Automobile Magazine.Retrieved17 August2014.
  243. ^abGibbs, Nick (19 July 2018)."2018 Paris Auto Show: Vietnam's Vinfast will unveil Italian-designed crossover and sedan".Automotive News.Crain Communications, Inc.Retrieved20 July2018.
  244. ^abWarrick, Jack (2 March 2022)."Vinfast and Pininfarina detail new VF 8 and VF 9 electric SUVs".Autocar.Retrieved9 May2022.
  245. ^Taylor, Edward (6 May 2008)."Start-Ups Race to Produce 'Green' Cars".The Wall Street Journal.Retrieved19 June2014.
  246. ^"New Electric Minicar from Pinifarina [sic]".Minutia microcars and minicars. 11 October 2008.Retrieved17 August2014.
  247. ^"Leaked: turbine-powered Pininfarina Cambiano plug-in hybrid".Retrieved17 August2014.
  248. ^"Pininfarina returns with hydrogen H2 Speed at Geneva Show".Retrieved17 March2016.
  249. ^"Pininfarina H2 Speed – hydrogen sports car revealed at Geneva".Retrieved17 March2016.
  250. ^"Pininfarina showcases silky-smooth, hydrogen-powered H2 Speed concept".4 March 2016.Retrieved17 March2016.
  251. ^"Automobili Pininfarina to Invest Over €20M in 'PURA' Design Cooperation for Luxury and Performance Electric Vehicle Range"(Press release).
  252. ^"Pininfarina 'Battista' supercar will pack 1,900-hp all-electric powertrain".
  253. ^abKunde, Dirk (28 November 2018)."Pininfarina PF0: Der schnellste italienische Sportwagen".golem.de(in German).Retrieved29 November2018.
  254. ^Duff, Mike (4 March 2019)."The Pininfarina Battista Is a 1900-HP Electric Hypercar from a Legendary Italian Coachbuilder".Car and Driver.Retrieved4 March2019.
  255. ^Tudose, Sergiu (24 July 2018)."Mahindra Unveils New Pininfarina-Designed Furio Trucks".carscoops.Retrieved17 August2024.
  256. ^"Pininfarina wins four Good Design 2020 Awards".Autocar Professional.Retrieved9 January2024.
  257. ^Padeanu, Adrian (14 July 2021)."Pininfarina Teorema Debuts As Radical Concept With Unique Seating Layout".motor1.Archived fromthe originalon 14 July 2021.Retrieved17 August2024.
  258. ^"Gaussin Announces World Tour for its Hydrogen-Powered H2 Racing Truck, Following Success at 2022 Dakar Rally".Collision Repair Magazine.3 March 2022.Retrieved9 January2024.
  259. ^"Exotic and Luxury Car News".duPont Registry.Retrieved9 January2024.
  260. ^Doll, Scooter (19 January 2022)."Automobili Pininfarina expands North American retail presence ahead of Battista hyper GT deliveries this year".electrek.co.Retrieved17 August2024.
  261. ^"Primatist Aerotop Pininfarina range".Primatist. Archived fromthe originalon 4 April 2016.
  262. ^"Primatist B62".Pininfarina.
  263. ^"Magnum 80' Series".Magnum Marine.
  264. ^"Pershing 88 Pininfarina".Acronautic.
  265. ^"Ottantacinque by Pininfarina".Pininfarina.
  266. ^"Rio Boat Show presents the Schaefer 800 by Pininfarina".Schaefer Yachts. Archived fromthe originalon 22 April 2016.
  267. ^"Schaefer Yachts - Schaefer 510 GT Pininfarina".schaeferyachts.us.Schaefer Yachts.Retrieved12 July2023.
  268. ^"Pininfarina joins Persico Marine on fourth WallyCento hull".Boat International.
  269. ^"Azimut Atlantic Challenger - The Italian Yachts".theitalianyachts.it.Retrieved12 July2023.
  270. ^"Pininfarina unveils persico F70, a sleek foiling 'hyperboat' engineered to fly on water".29 October 2021.
  271. ^"Monaco Yacht Show 2021: Oceanco Kairos by Pininfarina is an E-Hybrid Vessel That Encourages Mindfulness".Forbes.
  272. ^"Princess Yachts to Present Princess X80 and all-new V50 at boot Düsseldorf 2022".
  273. ^"Rossinavi teams up with Pininfarina for Aurea concept".
  274. ^"Pininfarina and Rossinavi's SuperSport 65 Megayacht is a Large Pile of Cash Away".11 December 2020.
  275. ^"1980".Pininfarina. Archived fromthe originalon 16 August 2009.Retrieved29 July2009.
  276. ^IC2000 arrives next year[dead link]
  277. ^"Swiss Tilting Trains Modernisation Programme".Railway Technology.Retrieved17 August2014.
  278. ^"Athens Trams Project in Greece".Railway Technology.Retrieved17 August2014.
  279. ^Campione, David (24 November 2008)."Metrostar, i nuovi treni della Circumvesuviana"(in Italian). FOL.Retrieved17 August2014.
  280. ^"Eurostar refurbishment design contract awarded".Railway Gazette International.8 April 2009.Retrieved17 August2014.
  281. ^"Bénéteau Group - history, models, brands and production".
  282. ^"London celebrates Italian design with Pininfarina showcase".
  283. ^"85m luxury yacht by fincantieri + pininfarina includes alterable twin pools".24 September 2015.
  284. ^"The 510 Sport from Pininfarina and Schaefer Yachts is the Ultimate Day Boat".21 February 2021.
  285. ^"Pininfarina's New 70-Foot Foiling Hyperboat Concept 'Flies' Above the Water".28 October 2021.
  286. ^"This Wally Sailing Yacht Sports a Pininfarina Interior".10 August 2017.
  287. ^"Meet the Pininfarina-Designed Princess X95 'Superfly' Yacht with a Modular Interior".Forbes.
  288. ^"Eurostar looks to the future with new e320 trains".CNN.14 November 2014.
  289. ^"You Can Now See the Swiss Alps from a $60 Million Crystal-Encrusted Gondola".23 January 2019.
  290. ^"Coffee Vending Machine Debuts at New York NRF Conference".15 January 2013.
  291. ^"Coca-Cola's New Slick Fountain Drink Dispenser Was Designed by Ferrari Developers".Business Insider.
  292. ^"Bovet and Pininfarina Add a New Platinum Edition of Their Latest Watch Collaboration".23 November 2018.
  293. ^"Chivas 18 by Pininfarina Chapter 3 launched".
  294. ^"De Rosa and Pininfarina double up on double-duty commuter bike".12 July 2018.
  295. ^"Hexagon partners with Pininfarina on Global Evo CMM".10 November 2015.
  296. ^"Ferrari designers worked with Cisco to make its new hardware easier to use".CNBC.20 June 2017.
  297. ^"Pininfarina Designed a Striking New Tractor for Grape Picking".3 December 2021.
  298. ^"New drives from SimpleTech designed by Pininfarina".Slashgear.Retrieved17 August2014.
  299. ^"Gorenje Pinifarina".Archived fromthe originalon 28 July 2014.Retrieved17 August2014.
  300. ^"Pininfarina designs new watch for Casio".Design Week.29 October 1999.Retrieved5 September2017.
  301. ^"Los defectos más" sonados "(y las mayores virtudes) de los relojes G-Shock"[The most awful defects (and the greatest virtues) from G-Shock watches] (in Spanish). Zona Casio. 11 November 2014.Retrieved5 September2017.
  302. ^Collier, Joe Guy (11 May 2010)."Coke targets Freestyle expansion for 2010".The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.Retrieved17 August2014.
  303. ^Collier, Joe Guy (16 September 2009)."Coke tests new dispenser in Atlanta".The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.Retrieved17 August2014.
  304. ^"1100 Millecento Residences Brickell".23 February 2012. Archived fromthe originalon 8 October 2013.Retrieved27 September2013.
  305. ^"Pininfarina SpA: Beachwalk, second Pininfarina project in Florida with The Related Group".3 May 2013.Retrieved27 September2013.
edit

44°58′10″N7°45′54″E/ 44.9693628°N 7.7650577°E/44.9693628; 7.7650577