Car Manufacturers logosGoodwood Moving Motor Show a new exciting format for your favourite cars.

New at Goodwood this year, the day before the Festival of Speed is a dedicated Manufacturer Day – being dubbed the ‘Moving Motor Show’ and being held within the spectacular grounds of Goodwood Park.

The exclusive format of the show is an important addition to the Festival of Speed, enabling a limited number of lucky motoring enthusiasts and new car buyers to see the very latest models for the first time in the UK.

During this day, new car buyers and enthusiasts will be able to enjoy an exclusive motor show preview day, where they will not only be able to see the very latest new car models on display in a dedicated covered exhibition area, but in some cases also climb aboard and experience the vehicles first-hand, strictly at the invitation of the attending manufacturers. The cars will undertake hundreds of runs on a special near-four mile evaluation route that includes the world famous Goodwood hillclimb, fully dressed and prepared for the Festival of Speed, which kicks off the following day. During the three days of the Festival itself, each of the Moving Motor Show exhibits will remain on static display for all Goodwood visitors to see and admire.

The Sunday Times Supercar Run is unique in providing a dynamic environment in which the public can view new models for the first time. Unlike a conventional motor show, the Supercar Run affords a fantastic opportunity not only to exhibit a new supercar, but also to show it in action on the Goodwood hillclimb during the Festival of Speed. This year 50 cars will participate in the Run, many of which have never been seen publically in action before, including the public world debut of the much-anticipated McLaren MP4-12C. Other supercars set to make their UK debuts include Zagato’s striking Alfa Romeo TZ3 Corsa, the Ferrari 458 ItaliaSpyker C-8 Aileron and Veritas RS III.

Away from the Supercar Run, the FoS-TECH technology pavilion showcases a variety of exciting future-focused automotive technologies. Rarely-seen concepts being displayed in this year’s FoS-TECH include the Audi e-Tron, Citroen ReVolte, Rinspeed UC, Lexus CT200h and Vauxhall Ampera.

Goodwood Moving Motor show imageNew cars at Goodwood due to be making either their UK/World debut, or rarely seen, include the following:

Abarth  500C, Evo PuntoAlvis 4.3 litreAlpina B5S, B3S Bi-TurboAston Martin One-77, RapideAudi  A1, A8 Roadster, RS5, e-TronBentley  Continental SupersportBMW 5 Touring, Z4 S DriveBowler Nemesis EXRBristol FighterBugatti Veyron 16.4 Grand SportCadillac  CTS-VChevrolet Camaro 2SS, Corvette ZR1Citroen DS3 Racing, Survolte, ReVolteFerrari 458 Italia, 599 GTO SPFord Focus RS500, Mondeo EcoBoostGinetta F400Honda CR-Z, Civic Type-R MugenHyundai  i-FlowJaguar XJ, XKRKoenigsegg TrevitaLand Rover Range Rover 40th AnniversaryLexus  LF-A, CT200h, Hybrid Bike SPLotus Elise facelift, fuel cell taxiMcLaren MP4-12C -Maserati  Gran CabrioMazda MX-5 SuperlightMercedes-Benz SLS AMG, B Fuel CellMG MG6Mini Countryman, E Race EXMorgan  LifeCar 2, Roadster SportNissan Juke, Leaf Pagani Zonda FPeugeot  RCZ, BB1, SP, HybridsPorsche  911 GT2 RS, GT3 RS, CayenneRinspeed UCRolls-Royce GhostRUF CTR3, eRUF SPSpyker C-8 AileronToyota Auris Hybrid, supercharged iQVauxhall Ampera, VXR8 2011Veritas RS IIIVolvo S60World First Hybrid WestfieldZagato TZ3 Corsa -

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British car industry?  Been in decline for years hasn’t it?  I mean look at Marcos, gone; look at TVR, gone.  Look at Bentley and Rolls Royce, sold to the Germans; Land Rover & Jaguar are Indian owned and Lotus has been Malaysian for years.  Sure, we here on this sceptered isle manufacture thousands of cars for Honda, Nissan, BMW, Ford, Vauxhall, Toyota and even MG, which is Chinese now.


But what of the actual, real British car industry?  Designed, manufactured and owned in the UK.  Well, if you scratch the surface the picture does start to look a little rosier.

Aston Martin is without a doubt the single most iconic British automotive brand in history.  Until recently owned by Ford, Aston Martin was bought in 2007 by a joint venture consortium headed by Dave Richards.  Richards also owns Prodrive, itself a hugely successful company and part of Britain’s massive motorsport industry – but that’s an article for another day.  Show a young boy a profile picture of a DB5 and he’ll name it immediately as an Aston Martin.  The company, founded in 1913, has an impeccable back catalogue but today’s range includes the DBS, DB9, Vantage and Rapide.  All surely destined to become future classics.  2010’s Aston Martin is a lean, mean, fighting machine, competing with the world’s top manufacturers for kudos.  Ferrari, Lamborghini, Bentley, Porsche are all mentioned in the same breath as Aston Martin.  Surely a modern, British success story.

A company destined to become as iconic a name as Aston Martin, in car design and manufacturing, is McLaren.  Notwithstanding McLaren’s racing pedigree (eight F1 manufacturer’s championships, twelve driver’s championships) the car company is a relatively new entity.  From 1992-1998 McLaren produced the F1 road car.  In its day it was the fastest, most expensive, most exclusive, most desired car on the planet.  Indeed such is the F1’s legacy that if you wanted to buy a second-hand F1 today it would cost three times more than the original asking price.  Then, in 2003 came the Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren.  Big, heavy and powerful.  It ticked more Mercedes boxes than McLaren; its nearest competitors were Mercedes own AMG SL’s.  McLaren made a spectacular return to form in 2009 with the MP4-12C.  Built on site at Woking, designed by McLaren themselves and managed by Ron Dennis the MP4-12C is profiled extensively elsewhere on this website.  Suffice to say it is amongst the most exciting and desirable supercars available today.


Morgan is another iconic British brand.  For years Morgan was known primarily for its humungous waiting list and its unchanged line-up but they have been dragged kicking and screaming into the twenty first century.  The company was founded in 1911 by Henry Morgan and, unbelievably, is still owned by the same family.  Charles Morgan took over in 2003 from his father, Peter who himself ran the company for forty-four years.  In 2000 the company introduced its first new model since 1948, the Aero 8.  Morgan hand-builds fourteen cars a week and is still going strong, although the waiting list is now shorter.  The Aero 8 and its sister car the Aeromax are undoubtedly modern cars, with alloy chassis and frame rather than the wood used in traditional Morgans, but their shape is unmistakably Morgan.  Like Porsche, with its evolving 911, a Morgan could never be mistaken for anything else.

Bristol.  Mention the name to anyone who isn’t a petrol-head and you will undoubtedly be met with a puzzled expression.  But Bristol have been making cars since 1945 from their base in….can you guess?  OK, Bristol.  Bristols are expensive, exclusive and discrete.  They make the Blenheim, a luxury saloon car with a stonking great V8 engine and the Fighter, a sportscar.  The Fighter T, the turbo-charged version, boasts some outstanding statistics.  Let me explain – 1012bhp, top speed of 270mph (limited to 225mph) and a kerb-weight of 1595kg.  Which is pretty amazing really.  Why hasn’t anyone heard of Bristol?  Because they don’t want us to.  They have more customers than they need, so why chase publicity?

Another company fighting at the top of its game is Noble.  Since 1999 Noble have been producing fantastic British sportscars.  The M10 started the ball rolling.  Universally acclaimed, the car used a Ford 2.5 litre engine mated to a lightweight chassis with razor sharp handling.  Plus the build quality was up to scratch.  Noble survived when so many of their competitors didn’t, and in 2009 released details of the M600.  0-60mph is achieved in 3 seconds flat whilst top speed is a theoretical 225mph.  The car will cost £200,000 and they will make fifty a year.

Next up are a brace of manufacturers who make cars based on the old Lotus 7 design, Caterham and Westfield.  Both are successful, and British.  Caterham is the more adventurous of the two; their latest car is the Superlight R400.  The R400 uses a 210bhp Ford engine and can achieve 0-60mph in 3.8 seconds but its killer app is its weight, which is an astonishing 515kg.  This gives 420bhp per tonne.  Hypercar territory for ‘just’ £30,000.

The final two companies on the list are Ginetta and Ariel.  Ginetta have made lightweight sportscars for over fifty years whilst Aerial are the new kids on the block, having made the exoskeletal Atom since 1996.

So, in conclusion, is the British car industry on its knees?  On the above evidence, absolutely not.  Aston Martin and McLaren form the top tier.  Both have solid roots, an immaculate image and showcase British engineering at its finest.  The rest, a combination of companies who have survived harsh times, and up and coming talent can only continue to prosper.

Indeed with a new government and a new optimism fuelling the seeds of growth surely we can look forward to a new dawn of British car making.  Gordon Murray, the brains behind the McLaren F1, is at the vanguard of a new movement.  With a small team he has developed the T25, which he hopes will become a new British icon.  The T25 is tiny, lightweight and safe.  It uses modular construction for a more efficient build process.  It will be cheap, it will be green, it will be flexible and it will be the future.

The British car industry is dead?  Long live the British car industry.

Some interesting links – McLaren AstonMartin GordonMurray Bristol Morgan Noble Caterham Westfield Ginetta Ariel Prodrive

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