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Lamborghini to Celebrate 60 Years of the Miura With Museum Exhibition

Lamborghini to Celebrate 60 Years of the Miura With Museum Exhibition

“Born Incomparable” explores the story that defined the modern mid-engine supercar formula

Just a week ago, we revisited the Lamborghini Miura, marking its 60th anniversary on March 10. From its radical mid-engine layout to its lasting influence on every high-performance machine that followed, the Miura’s story remains one of the most important in automotive history. Now, Lamborghini has announced how it plans to honor that legacy of what many regard as the world’s first true supercar

At the Automobili Lamborghini Museum in Sant’Agata Bolognese, a new exhibition titled “Born Incomparable” will run from March 18, 2026, through January 2027. If you’re going to be in the Italian motor valley over the coming year, this is an exhibit you don't want to miss, as this display brings together some of the most significant Miura variants ever created, alongside some noteworthy tribute models starting with the original 1965 chassis that stunned audiences before the car itself was even revealed. The exhibit will also include the Miura P400 S, which features a more refined formula with improved suspension, a wider track, and a 370-horsepower 3.9-liter V12.

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“For Lamborghini, the Miura represented a moment of extraordinary revolution and a decisive push toward the company’s future. Telling this story through an exhibition dedicated to this iconic model is a fundamental step in celebrating its 60th anniversary,” - Federico Foschini, Chief Marketing and Sales Officer of Automobili Lamborghini.

Marcello Gandini and Bertone’s influence takes center stage with the showcase of the Miura Roadster, a one-off design study unveiled in 1968. With no roof, no side windows, and a fully exposed rear deck, it pushed the Miura’s design language into something far more experimental. Alongside will sit a Miura SVJ, developed from Bob Wallace’s Jota prototype, a machine that translated racing ideas into a road-going format in extremely limited numbers. It is believed that only four examples were ever produced. 

The exhibit will also showcase the 2006 Miura Design study, which reimagined the mid-engine flagship for the modern day, under Walter deSilva, who was the head of Lamborghini design at the time. Beyond the Miura, Lamborghini will also showcase the Aventador LP 780-4 Ultimae Roadster Miura Omaggio, a Miura-inspired commission and the final Aventador Roadster of the production line, configured through its Ad Personam customization program.

Lamborghini will also extend the celebration through its Polo Storico heritage division. A dedicated Miura tour will run from May 6 to May 10 across Northern Italy, beginning in Piemonte and concluding at Imola during the annual Lamborghini Arena festival. It is a fitting setting for a car that helped define the brand’s identity.

The Miura’s relevance is not confined to history. Just this past week at Amelia Island, a 1972 Miura P400 SV achieved a hammer price of $6,000,000, reinforcing its position as one of the most valuable and sought-after classic Lamborghinis in the market today.

We will take a closer look at that result and what it signals for the broader collector car market in a dedicated market spotlight soon, alongside an upcoming feature exclusive to Automobili Lamborghini. Watch this space.

View All Lamborghini Miuras For Sale


Images: Automobili Lamborghini

Khris Bharath