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    A sleek white sports car is parked at night in front of an industrial building under artificial lighting.

    The Secret Unseen Countach That Revived Lamborghini's Wedge Legacy

    In our recent coverage of Lamborghini Centro Stile’s 20th Anniversary celebrations at the brand’s museum in Sant’Agata Bolognese, the spotlight was on the Lamborghini Manifesto concept. But tucked among the lineup of design studies was something far more intriguing: an unreleased Countach prototype that shaped the production version of the LPI 800-4, a name that celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2021.

    Lamborghini’s current design director, Mitja Borkert, recently shared close-up shots of this prototype on his Instagram. Before the Countach LPI 800-4 project was finalized, this prototype served as its visual test bed, a design feasibility study executed with near-production accuracy. The final car that debuted during the 2021 Monterey Car Week and is limited to just 112 examples worldwide carries much of that DNA forward, from its low stance to its dramatic proportions. However, look closely and the differences lie in the detailing: the prototype’s surfaces were sharper, its lines more geometric, its intent purer.

    This pre-production 1:1 model served as the creative bridge between past and present, was able to capture the essence of Marcello Gandini’s original wedge philosophy under Bertone from the early 1970s, but with even greater design freedom. Without the usual constraints of homologation or production tooling, Borkert’s team could fully explore the possibilities of what a modern-day Countach could truly look like.

    The production LPI 800-4 combined a 6.5-liter naturally aspirated V12 with a 48-volt electric motor to produce 802 horsepower. It could sprint from 0 to 62 mph in 2.8 seconds and reach a top speed of 221 mph. It represents the creative inflection point when Lamborghini’s designers revisited Gandini’s legacy through a modern lens, proving that half a century later, the wedge still defines the soul of Sant’Agata. Find out in-depth walkaround with Mr.Borkert, where he dives into the development of this one-off creation and highlights the differences to the production variant.

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    Images: @mitjaborkert

    Khris Bharath