Lamborghini 400 GT: a rare breed of bull
André Trigano’s extensive car collection is being sold on, and this Namazing Lamborghini 400 GT is the star, says Simon de Burton
Now is a great time to be in business if you make and sell camping kit – thanks to the ‘staycation’ boom brought about by COVID-19 travel restrictions, sales of tents are reported to have gone through the roof.
There was a similar situation in France way back in 1936 when the government decreed that the working population should be entitled to paid holiday for the first time. Noticing the rising popularity of camping that came with the move, Raymond Trigano adapted his Paris-based tarpaulin factory to become a tent manufacturer and went on to make himself a fortune.
Among those to benefit was his son André who, having survived the war as a French Resistance fighter (he signed-up at 14), helped to re-start the business and used some of his wealth to indulge a passion for buying and racing cars and, ultimately, collecting them on a grand scale.
Four years ago, Artcurial sold 48 of Trigano’s beloved Citroëns in a single-owner sale, the highlight of which was a 1961 2CV ‘Sahara’ four-wheel-drive model that fetched €172,840.
Now, at the age of 94 and ‘not brave enough to drive anymore,’ Trigano has again chosen Artcurial to sell the remaining, err, 170 cars from his vast and varied collection that ranges from the abandoned shell of a 1990 Citroën Visa estimated at €30 to the jewel in the crown, this 1967 Lamborghini 400 GT two-plus-two that’s tipped to realise more than half-a-million.
The 400 GT is a rare model by any standards – just 247 were built – but Trigano’s is likely unique in having been owned by him since new.
Persuaded to trade-up from a 350GT by the lure of the additional seating capacity, he used the four-litre, 320bhp Lambo exactly for purpose – i.e. high-speed touring – finding particular pleasure in its performance on the era’s unrestricted motorways. That said, Trigano has clocked-up just 33,800km during his 53 years of ownership, leaving it with an interior that’s described by Artcurial as being ‘magnificently conserved’ and ‘flawless’.
With its original V12 running sweetly as a result of a meticulous maintenance regime, the car is described as superbly well preserved with the only area likely to attract criticism being the paintwork – it’s immaculate, but the car was gold, not red, when Trigano originally took delivery.
Besides that, it really is hard to fault, with those fabulous looks alone presenting a sound argument for choosing it over a more obvious (and probably more expensive) Ferrari of the same ilk. And if you were already in the market for a 400GT, look no further. This must be a once-in-a-blue-moon opportunity to buy a low mileage example.
1967 Lamborghini 400 GT
On sale with Artcurial, Gibel, France, September 13.
€400,000 – 600,000
artcurial.com
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