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Lamborghini Canto Roadster

The Lamborghini Canto Roadster Prototype by Zagato.

Vehicle Overview

The Lamborghini Canto Roadster was a prototype developed in the late 1990s as part of the P147 project, intended as a successor to the Lamborghini Diablo. The design was executed by Zagato of Milan under contract with Lamborghini. The Canto represented one of several transitional studies undertaken prior to Audi AG’s acquisition of Lamborghini Automobili S.p.A. in 1998. The prototype retained the structural underpinnings and mechanical components of the Diablo, including the 6.0-litre V12 engine mounted longitudinally behind the cockpit. Power output was estimated to fall within the range of 610 to 640 metric horsepower, transmitted to all four wheels via a six-speed manual gearbox. The projected performance targets included a maximum speed approaching 350 km/h, though no verified performance testing figures were published. The design emphasized large, rear-oriented cooling intakes, low frontal height, and a rear treatment that diverged from contemporary Lamborghini practice. The open-top Roadster variant, reportedly styled concurrently with the coupé prototype, featured a simplified roof structure with no apparent provision for a retractable hardtop. The rear buttresses and deck were reshaped to accommodate the revised airflow requirements and structural alterations inherent to the open-body configuration. Criticism of the Canto’s exterior proportions, particularly the intake architecture and surface transitions, led to the project’s cancellation following internal review by Volkswagen Group leadership. Ferdinand Piëch, then-chairman of Volkswagen AG, is known to have rejected the design on aesthetic grounds shortly after the acquisition. Development ceased prior to production readiness. The number of physical units constructed is not publicly confirmed, though a limited quantity of development chassis were completed in either coupé or roadster configuration. No official homologation or registration was issued. Surviving prototypes remain in private or corporate custody. Known examples have appeared intermittently in controlled exhibitions but are not part of any commercial offering. The Canto Roadster marks a terminal point in Lamborghini’s pre-Audi design trajectory, reflecting the final stages of the company’s independent operations. The project was ultimately superseded by the development of the Murciélago, introduced under Audi’s oversight in 2001.

Technical Specifications

  • Body
  • Registered
    1998
  • Make
    Lamborghini
  • Model
    Canto Roadster
  • Coachbuilder
    Zagato
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