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Ferrari GG50
Ferrari GG50
from Wikipedia
The Ferrari GG50

The Ferrari GG50 is a concept car created by Ferrari to mark the fifty years during which Giorgetto Giugiaro had been designing cars. It was introduced at the 2005 Tokyo Motor Show.

2005 Ferrari GG50 "Giorgetto Giugiaro 50" On display in the Italdesign showroom in Moncalieri, Italy

Engine and performance

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Rear view

The Ferrari GG50 has special modifications inspired by Formula 1, to improve performance. It uses a 65 degree V12 naturally aspirated petrol engine. The engine develops peak power of 540 horsepower (403 kW), which is 94 horsepower (70 kW) per litre. The compression ratio is 11.2:1. The GG50 uses a sequential mode automatic transmission.[1]

Design

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The GG50 is a 2+2 coupé "supercar". The interior is mostly carried from the Ferrari 612 Scaglietti on which it is based, as well as part of the exterior design. The exterior body is around four inches shorter and has a differently shaped nose.[2] Some cues, such as the steering wheel, derive from Ferrari's F1 vehicles of the past. Unique parts of the GG50 are its dashboard and the fact that the GG50 uses the Pioneer AVIC–X1R satellite navigation system.[3]

References

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from Grokipedia
The Ferrari GG50 is a one-off concept car designed by Giorgetto Giugiaro through his firm Italdesign to celebrate his 50 years in automotive design, debuting at the 2005 Tokyo Motor Show. Based on the Ferrari 612 Scaglietti grand tourer, it retains the donor model's complete mechanical setup, including a 5,748 cc V12 engine delivering 540 horsepower at 7,250 rpm and a six-speed automatic transmission with sequential mode, while introducing a more compact and practical fastback silhouette. Conceived in September 2004 during the and sketched by hand starting in February 2005, the GG50—named for Giugiaro's initials and his design milestone—transforms the 612 Scaglietti into a family-oriented coupé with enhanced usability. The body measures 4,810 mm in length (9 cm shorter than the 612, with 2 cm less at the nose and 7 cm at the tail), 1,950 mm wide, and 1,347 mm high, maintaining the 2,950 mm but featuring tapered corners, a raised roofline, and descending rear window for better rear-seat access. A key innovation is the tail with a liftgate and foldable rear seatbacks, creating a flat load floor that expands luggage capacity to 500 liters—more than double the 612 Scaglietti's 240 liters—evoking the space of a while preserving Ferrari's elegant proportions. Giugiaro, who began his career in 1955 and had previously designed iconic Ferraris like the 250 GT Bertone, envisioned the GG50 as a personal vehicle for family travel, personally applying the emblem to its tail. Equipped with 20-inch tires (245/35 ZR20 front, 305/35 ZR20 rear) and a redesigned rear structure including an expanded fuel tank, the blends high performance with everyday functionality, underscoring Giugiaro's influence on blending form and utility in luxury sports cars. Though never produced, the GG50 remains a notable tribute to Giugiaro's legacy, highlighting Ferrari's willingness to explore practical evolutions of its grand touring heritage.

Background

Giugiaro's design legacy

began his illustrious career in in 1955 at the age of 17, joining Fiat's styling center in , where he quickly rose to prominence for his innovative sketches and prototypes. By , Giugiaro had founded S.p.A., a pioneering design studio that would go on to shape the aesthetics of over 200 production car models across numerous manufacturers, resulting in more than 60 million vehicles produced worldwide. His portfolio includes iconic designs for brands such as (e.g., the Golf Mk1), , and , blending sharp angular lines with functional elegance that defined late-20th-century automotive styling. Among his early contributions were bespoke Ferrari bodies, such as the 1962 250 GT Bertone, which showcased his emerging talent for sculptural forms on high-performance chassis during his tenure at Bertone. The Ferrari GG50 stands as a personal milestone in Giugiaro's career, named after his initials (GG) and the "50" denoting five decades since his debut in 1955. Conceived as a self-commissioned project to celebrate this anniversary, Giugiaro envisioned the car as a family-oriented Ferrari that reflected his lifelong passion for the marque, drawing on his deep-rooted connections to Italian automotive heritage. This one-off prototype exemplifies his enduring influence, serving not only as a retrospective homage but also as a testament to his evolution from youthful prodigy to design legend, honored as the "Car Designer of the Century" in 1999 by a global jury of automotive experts. Italdesign played a central role in realizing the GG50, handling both the and the complete of the fully operational as a tribute. This collaboration underscores Ferrari's longstanding tradition of partnering with esteemed Italian design houses, such as and Italdesign, to push the boundaries of automotive artistry. Through the GG50, Giugiaro's legacy is encapsulated in a singular artifact that honors his contributions to an industry he helped transform.

Platform origins

The Ferrari served as a modified iteration of the production , preserving its core front-engine, rear-wheel-drive architecture and 2+2 seating arrangement designed for versatile grand touring. This foundational setup allowed the GG50 to maintain the 612's emphasis on balanced dynamics suitable for both high-speed travel and everyday usability. Among the key shared elements were the 2.95-meter , which provided proportional stability, and select components of the aluminum spaceframe , constructed from extruded aluminum sections joined by castings to achieve a yet rigid structure. These features underscored the overarching ethos of integrating exhilarating performance with refined luxury, a hallmark of the 612 Scaglietti platform. In contrast to the standard 612 Scaglietti, the GG50 represented a more compact evolution intended to hint at prospective Ferrari directions, with its body shortened by 9 centimeters to a total length of 4.81 meters for enhanced visual agility and modernity. This adaptation by refined the silhouette while staying true to the platform's engineering heritage.

Development

Conception and inspiration

The idea for the Ferrari GG50 originated in September 2004 during the , where designer discussed with Ferrari executives, including Vice Chairman who approved the idea immediately, the concept of a personal tribute car to mark his 50 years in automotive design; Chairman Luca Cordero di Montezemolo selected the as the base model. Giugiaro's inspiration stemmed from his ambition to create a more compact suitable for family use, blending the brand's grand touring heritage with greater compactness. The project drew on the as its base platform, allowing Giugiaro to reimagine the proportions without altering the core mechanical setup. Ferrari endorsed the initiative, granting Italdesign—Giugiaro's firm—full creative lead on the non-production concept, with no commercial production intent, under the condition that it align with the brand's image and be shorter than the donor vehicle.

Design and engineering process

The design and engineering process for the Ferrari GG50 commenced in February 2005 with hand-drawn sketches at a 1:10 scale, executed by using a 2H lead pencil on , under his oversight as lead designer. These initial concepts were subsequently digitized, translated into mathematical surfaces via CAD/CAS software, and rendered as a dynamic 1:1 scale visualization within Italdesign's Design Center. By mid-2005, specifically April, the process advanced to mathematical modeling and the creation of a full-scale model through milling, enabling detailed ergonomic assessments and refinements to interior access. Italdesign's in-house engineering team then adapted the underlying chassis from the , shortening the overall body length by 9 cm to 4.81 m—achieved by trimming 2 cm from the front overhang and 7 cm from the rear—while maintaining the original 2.95 m and structural integrity through targeted reinforcements, such as a reinforced roof edge cross-member for the new configuration, all optimized using CAD for precision. This included repositioning the 95-liter fuel tank below the boot line to accommodate a flat load platform. Prototype assembly began in June 2005 at Italdesign's facilities, resulting in a fully functional that underwent testing for drivability to validate the modifications, though it was not evaluated for production viability. The completed GG50 debuted at the 2005 Tokyo Motor Show.

Design

Exterior features

The Ferrari GG50 presents a compact 2+2 characterized by a low-slung profile and a cab-forward cabin positioning, which visually diminishes its 4.81-meter length compared to the base . This design achieves a leaner appearance through seamless flowing lines from the long bonnet—featuring a subtle V-crease—to the rounded nose and tail, eschewing sharp creases in favor of smoother curves at the headlamp cowl and front wheel arches. Key exterior styling cues include slim vertical xenon headlights set in distinctive black crescent housings, positioned adjacent to the iconic oval grille flanked by vertical cooling air intakes and fog lamps for a cohesive front fascia. The fastback roofline integrates a photochromic glass panel that merges continuously with the windshield and fenders, culminating in a gently curving rear wing serving as a subtle spoiler to aid stability. The body construction employs aluminum panels welded to the spaceframe chassis, promoting lightness while maintaining structural integrity derived from the 612 Scaglietti platform. Aerodynamically, the GG50 features tapered side extremities and smooth contours along the flanks to the rear wheel arches. The tail enhances aerodynamics. These elements, realized by Italdesign under , blend classic Ferrari proportions with innovative simplicity for enhanced presence and performance potential.

Interior layout

The Ferrari GG50 features a seating configuration, with front sports seats upholstered in accented by inserts for a luxurious yet sporty ambiance. The rear seats are designed for occasional use by passengers, providing improved headroom and accessibility through a raised roofline and tapered side windows that reduce the cramped feel typical of grand tourers. These rear seatbacks fold flat to form a 500-liter cargo platform, enhancing practicality for longer journeys while maintaining the car's grand touring heritage derived from the 612 Scaglietti. The dashboard adopts a driver-centric layout, housing stock Ferrari analog gauges—including a central rev counter and —within a single hooded , complemented by a digital information screen for essential data. A three-spoke provides intuitive control, while the minimalist center console features a glossy dark grey panel with integrated Pioneer AVIC-X1R and five rotary air-conditioning dials, emphasizing ergonomic refinement over excess. Luxury is further highlighted through beech wood inserts in door storage compartments and natural aluminum grab handles, creating a balanced blend of functionality and premium tactile quality. Unique elements enhance the user experience, such as generous storage pockets integrated into the central console between front and rear seats, protected by flaps for secure access during travel. A photochromic provides a seamless canopy effect with tinting capabilities, improving visibility and openness for occupants without compromising the coupe's structural integrity. These touches underscore the GG50's focus on family-oriented grand touring comfort.

Specifications

Engine and drivetrain

The Ferrari GG50 features a 5.748-liter naturally aspirated 65-degree V12 engine, designated as the Tipo F133F and derived from the powerplant in the 612 Scaglietti. This engine shares key components with the 612 platform, including its front-longitudinal mounting configuration. Constructed with an aluminum block and heads, the V12 employs a DOHC setup with 48 valves, multi-point fuel injection, and variable valve timing to optimize performance across the rev range. It delivers 540 horsepower at 7,250 rpm and 434 lb-ft of torque at 5,250 rpm. The drivetrain is , incorporating a integrated with the rear-mounted final drive for enhanced traction. Power is transmitted via a six-speed automated manual gearbox with F1-style paddle shifters, offering sequential shifting without a traditional pedal.

Dimensions and performance

The Ferrari GG50 measures 4.81 meters in length, 1.95 meters in width, and 1.347 meters in height, with a wheelbase of 2.95 meters. Its curb weight is estimated at approximately 1,900 kg, reflecting modifications to the underlying platform for a more compact grand tourer profile. The vehicle is fitted with 20-inch wheels and Bridgestone Potenza tires sized 245/35 ZR20 at the front and 305/35 ZR20 at the rear, providing enhanced grip suited to its rear-wheel-drive layout. Powered by a , the GG50 achieves 0-100 km/h acceleration in approximately 4.2 seconds and a top speed exceeding 320 km/h. The GG50 features an independent double-wishbone suspension system with active damping, tuned specifically for its shortened body to deliver balanced handling dynamics. It is equipped with ventilated disc brakes measuring 380 mm in diameter, ensuring robust stopping power in line with its capabilities.
DimensionMeasurement
Length4.81 m
Width1.95 m
Height1.347 m
Wheelbase2.95 m
Curb Weight~1,900 kg
Front Tires245/35 ZR20
Rear Tires305/35 ZR20

References

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