A one-off Ferrari Daytona Shooting Brake Homage has been created by Niels van Roij Design, reimagining the 1972 classic for the modern era.
The project took over 15,000 hours to complete, with nearly every exterior panel redesigned and hand-built from aluminum.
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Redesigned from Every Angle
The car is based on a Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano, but virtually every visible panel except the doors is new.
The body is hand-formed from aluminum, featuring a longer roofline and elongated rear bodywork.
Instead of a conventional tailgate, the car uses electronically operated butterfly rear windows that open directly into the luggage compartment.
The front end gets bespoke full-width headlamps that reinterpret the original Daytona's amber lighting using carbon-composite 3D-printed components.
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The exhausts are shaped to mimic a double-barrel shotgun.
No mechanical changes have been confirmed, so the car likely retains the 599's 6.0-liter V12 producing 611 hp and a 0-62 mph time of 3.7 seconds.
Cognac Leather and Central Gauges
The interior is equally bespoke. The gauge cluster sits centrally on the dash, as in the original 1972 build.
Everything is trimmed in Cognac tan leather with diamond-stitched carbon-backed bucket seats. The Ferrari emblem is absent from the steering wheel for legal reasons.
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The luggage compartment features CNC-machined aluminum runners that match the gearbox selector panel. The butterfly windows have exposed aluminum hardware, which the design house calls jewelry.