Teenage drivers in the early 1980s got very creative when it came to making their VW Polos and Golfs look like Italian sports cars. The Swiss car designer and nonconventional Franco Sbarro went the other way – and turned a Ferrari 308 GTB into an infernal, mid-engined hot hatch.
If there is one design studio that outshone all other tuning studios during the era of automotive excess in the early 1980s, it must be Sbarro of Switzerland. Founded by a car mechanic, designer, and engineer Franco Sbarro, the studio created dozens of sometimes fascinating, sometimes outright bizarre Frankenstein cars. Over the years, the experimental hot rods, monstrous SUVs, hysterical hypercars, and other cartoonishly proportioned prototypes became guaranteed crowd-pullers at the annual motor shows.
In the spring of 1984, the visitors of the Geneva Motor Show who managed to push through the crowds at the Sbarro stand marveled at a surprisingly compact but wide-hipped and chromed-out hatchback car dubbed the Sbarro Super Eight. As it turned out, Franco Sbarro and his team had based the car on the chassis, 5-speed gearbox, and V8 engine of a Ferrari 308 GTB, creating the 260+ HP hot hatch Maranello was so reluctant to build. The 3.0-liter engine had been mounted transversely and accelerated the 800-kilo pocket rocket to a top speed of 130+ mph.
Sporting spoiler lips and Testarossa-style air intakes, the Sbarro Super Eight was dressed to impress – but once you made it beyond the dramatically styled fiberglass body, you found yourself in a surprisingly subtle and elegant cockpit clad in caramel-colored leather, textiles, and carpets. There was even a full stereo system – and of course, that trademark open-gate gearbox that reminded you what kind of engine was roaring right behind you.
Source: Jan Baedeker | classicdriver.com
Images: Sbarro; Peter Vann; Speed 8 Classics