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Giotto Bizzarrini, Ferrari and Lamborghini Icon, Has Died

giotto bizzarrini
Italian Automotive Icon Giotto Bizzarrini Has DiedKlemantaski Collection - Getty Images

Giotto Bizzarrini, the automotive industry icon behind the Ferrari 250 GTO and Lamborghini’s famed V-12 engine, passed away on May 13, aged 96.

Bizzarrini Design, the revived automotive outfit bearing Giotto’s name, took to Instagram yesterday to share news of his passing just ahead of his 97th birthday. Bizzarrini was one of the last remaining titans of the golden age of the Italian automotive industry, himself attached to projects set to be remembered long after all of us. Bizzarrini’s automotive career began all the way back in 1953, when he joined Alfa Romeo after graduating from the University of Pisa earlier that same year. Bizzarrini would work on the development program for the Giulietta, before ultimately becoming a test driver and engineer for the brand’s more experimental projects. For his efforts at Alfa, Bizzarrini would be recruited to join Ferrari in 1957.

ferrari 250 gto most valuable car of all time
Dane Pollok

During his time as chief engineer at Maranello, Bizzarrini would have a hand in creating the brand’s most iconic and valuable car: the 250 GTO. Development of the project is said to have begun with Bizzarrini own short wheelbase 250 GT, which he’d help transform into a proper motorsports competitor. Improved weight distribution, a relocated engine, dry sump oiling, and reworked aero helped solidify the car’s performance on track. Bizzarrini wouldn’t be at Ferrari when “Il Mostro” entered production however, as he departed the company as part of the Great Ferrari Walkout of 1961. The 250 GTO would go on to win the FIA’s over 2000cc class for GT Manufacturers in 1962, 1963, and 1964. Only 36 were built, today remaining some of the most expensive cars in the world.

Bizzarrini would continue his influence in the automotive world as an independent engineer before creating the Societa Autostar in 1962. It would be through Societa Autosta that Bizzarrini helped develop the Iso Rivolta and Grifo models during their short-lived relationship. It would also be during this time that another Italian sports car maker would come to Bizzarini for help in taking on Ferrari: Ferruccio Lamborghini.