Rolls-Royce launches client design program with boat-shaped cars | Automotive News Europe

2021-12-23 07:52:10 By :

The first of the modern Boat Tails has a back deck that opens like butterfly wings to reveal small picnic tables and a parasol.

Rolls-Royce has unveiled its 'Coachbuild' program that will allow some favored customers to commission a car of their own.

"We have seen quite a lot of clients approaching us asking if they could do something [unique]," Rolls-Royce CEO, Torsten Müller-Ötvös, said. "It is not [Rolls-Royce] proposing ideas, and then the client buys them. Coachbuild in its truest form is the client comes, tells us what kind of body he would like to see, and we do it. That is what is happening here."

The automaker is starting the program by making three individual cars in a style they are calling the Rolls-Royce Boat Tail. Each has been custom-built as an open-air four-seat model with a rear portion designed to evoke the deck of a J Class yacht--a single-masted racing boat like those used in the Americas Cup. (A rigid canopy top also comes with each for driving in bad weather.)

The Boat Tails were named and inspired by a trend in the 1920s and '30s, where Rolls-Royce grafted what looked like a yacht's hull onto a chassis, though that precedent did not exactly save the company any time in making the modern ones. The three cars required four years of planning and construction, with 1,813 new components.

Each Boat Tail car has been custom-built as an open-air four-seat model with a rear portion designed to evoke the deck of a J Class yacht.

The introduction of the bespoke program comes as the ultraluxury brand saw first-quarter gains rise 61 percent and record quarterly deliveries.

One client who owned one of the original Boat Tails from almost a century ago inspired the other two buyers of the new ones during a brainstorming session.

"He always dreamt about how to transform that vehicle into the future," Müller-Ötvös said. "The others were quite intrigued by that idea, so we agreed quite quickly, 'All right, let us go for a Boat Tail idea.' Our designer sharpened his pencil and started to draw up some ideas, and from there it went."

The first of the modern Boat Tails, in a blue hue whose specific nomenclature is known only to the client and Rolls-Royce, has a back deck that opens like butterfly wings to reveal small picnic tables and a parasol.

"The idea was born of al fresco dining, lavish picnics, ambience. ... The idea of these butterfly wings, which are softly opening, was born by Alex [Innes], I must say, and that was very much loved by the clients immediately." Innes is the head of Rolls-Royce's Coachbuild program.

Each car is unique in coloration, trimlines, interior flourishes, and specific requests. Other basic details may be familiar to those who already own bespoke Rolls-Royce coaches: a refrigerator to hold Champagne bottles cooled to precisely 6C, for example, and an aluminum-and-leather glove box sized to hold a special pen. Rolls-Royce and Bovet 1822 also developed two unique reversible his-and-her timepieces that can be worn or stored within the Boat Tail as its onboard clock.

Rolls-Royce began the idea of a modern one-off program with the proof-of-concept Sweptail in 2017, a car that made its debut at Concours d'Elegance Villa d'Este near Lake Como, which was widely regarded as the most expensive new automobile in the world. That had been commissioned in 2013 at the request of a superyacht and aircraft specialist.

"Sweptail sparked quite a lot of interested in the market," Müller-Ötvös said. "So, we have seen quite a lot of clients approaching us asking if they could do something."

The bespoke Boat Tail cars contain some details already found in other Rolls-Royce models such as a refrigerator to hold Champagne bottles cooled to precisely 6C.

When asked about profit for a project that requires such intensive handiwork, Müller-Ötvös declined to specify a margin. "I would never enter the company into anything that is not profitable, rest assured. It is also, of course, quite boosting for the brand, but it's not an investment where we do it just for the brand. We also do it for commercial reasons."

The customization does not extend to underneath the hood, at least for now. The Boat Tail has the same 6.75-liter V-12 engine as the Phantom, Cullinan, and Ghost. No one asked for anything different, Müller-Ötvös said: "The engine is a fantastic Rolls-Royce engine with enough power. That never came up for a single minute, to make changes around the engine."

Müller-Ötvös also does not rule out future examples from the Coachbuild program one day being powered by alternative engines or fuel. "I would not outlaw that one day, but this is not really the point--the point very much is in the body," he said. "I do not know if it will come up in the future, but why? There is sufficient power" in the V-12 engine. 

Rolls-Royce has long sent the majority of its cars out of the factory with high levels of customization and made-to-order options--beginning with a choice of 44,000 paint colors. Commissions have increased year-over-year since modern bespoke production began at Goodwood in 2003, according to the company. In the first quarter of 2021, every vehicle built at Rolls-Royce across the entire model family included bespoke elements, it said in a written statement.

The company pioneered the "coach-built" model strategy a century earlier with such one-off icons as the Rolls-Royce 40/50HP Phantom I Brougham De Ville of 1926, which re-created the rococo ambience of a Palace of Versailles salon with polished satinwood veneers, Aubusson tapestries, and a painted ceiling inspired by a sedan chair owned by Marie Antoinette. It was built for Clarence Warren Gasque, an American businessman of French ancestry living in London at the time.

The Rolls-Royce 17EX of 1928, which could hit then-astounding speeds of 90 mph (145 kph), and the Phantom II Continental Drophead Coupé of 1934 followed. In 1972 the Phantom VI, famous for its burled walnut picnic tables and accompanying "toadstool" seats that clipped to the front bumpers, became the final Rolls-Royce model constructed in the old built-to-order manner.

Many of the most significant coach-built cars are worth high six and seven figure sums. In June, a 1933 Rolls-Royce Phantom II Special will be offered with an estimated price of 1.3 million Swiss francs to 1.75 million Swiss francs ($1.45 million to $1.95 million) at an auction in Lichtenstein.

Müller-Ötvös declined to name the buyers and the pricing of the new Coachbuild series, though he said he has known the three clients personally for "a long, long time."

"There is an idea to bring them together one day, but they are spread all around the world," he said. "They all three enjoy life. They love to celebrate. And when you see what you can do with the car, it's quite celebratory. Unbelievable picnicking and dining experiences can happen, that is kind of the idea."

Meanwhile, the next batch of Rolls-Royce Coachbuild cars are already being planned, with allocations available by invitation only--personally extended from the CEO himself. 

"For us, it is the jewel on top of everything, the true pinnacle of our entire business model at Rolls-Royce Motor Cars, and for that reason it needs to stay super rare," said Müller-Ötvös. "We are not in any way tempted here to go into more and more and more. That would devalue the entire thing."

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