Description
The Lancia Stratos Zero, unveiled in 1970, stands as one of the most radical concept cars in automotive history — a wedge-shaped vision that redefined what a sports car could look like and paved the way for the legendary Lancia Stratos rally car. Designed by Marcello Gandini at Bertone, the Zero wasn’t meant as a practical vehicle; it was a dramatic design manifesto meant to shock automakers and the public alike.
Built on a modified Lancia Fulvia chassis, the Zero sat impossibly low — barely over 33 inches (84 cm) tall — with an extreme, arrow-like profile. Entry came not from doors, but through a forward-tilting windshield canopy, forcing the driver to almost lie down inside. The mid-mounted 1.6-liter V4 engine emphasized performance orientation, even though the car’s true mission was design exploration rather than racing.
Bertone used the Zero as a calling card to court Lancia for future collaboration, driving it directly onto Lancia’s grounds to get executives’ attention. It worked: the radical concept convinced Lancia to partner with Bertone, leading directly to development of the Lancia Stratos HF — one of the most successful rally cars ever built.
The Stratos Zero remains influential today. It inspired decades of wedge-shaped supercars, from the Lamborghini Countach to numerous futuristic concept vehicles, and continues to be celebrated as a masterpiece of automotive design. More sculpture than car — but undeniably functional — the Stratos Zero helped bridge art, engineering, and motorsport ambition in unforgettable fashion.







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