Benedict Castle Concours Returns with a Powerhouse Roster of Cars and Collectors
Three years after COVID-19 shut it down and more than three years after the loss of its beloved founder, Nicole Meguiar, the Benedict Castle Concours has returned, with a powerhouse roster of collector car luminaries and a complete cross section of autos from every era. The grounds of Benedict Castle in Riverside, California, are home to Teen Challenge, one of the most successful drug treatment and rehab facilities in the world. All proceeds from the concours go directly to that worthy cause. Collector car luminaries faithfully attend, too: Chip Foose, Wayne Carini, Mike Brewer, Corky Coker, and the great, 102-year-old Ed Iskenderian himself, all attended this year and no one got paid a dime. They did, however, get to see some great cars.
The Nethercutt Collection's 1931 Bugatti Type 51 Dobos not only won the 1931 Monaco Grand Prix in the third year of that race's existence, it also won Best in Show at Benedict, rightly so.
This was the coolest car of the year when it debuted at SEMA last year and it may still be the coolest this year: Luc De Lay's MarCel Roadster. Chip Foose offered some design direction, too.
"It's just my rendition of a late-'50s Ferrari, Maserati, Aston Martin, Scarab, whatever you like," said renowned metal shaper Luc De Lay. "I wanted to show off the metal shape."
Those in the know, those who actually have cars like this built, always have the bodies built at Marcel's Custom Metal in Norco, California. De Lay says this took three years to hammer out. The evocative shape was something well worth the wait.
The Mullin Automotive Museum's 1938 Delahaye 135 also won an award.
1934 Duesenberg in front of Benedict Castle.
Ron Perry's 1974 BMW 3.0 CSL "Batmobile."
The Motor City Shaker rules the drags!
The charity that is directly supported by the concours, Teen Challenge, for drug addiction treatment, is faith-based.
Lloyd Schultz's '31 Ford Coupe and Robert Bruns' '37 Chevrolet Business Coupe. Ford vs. Chevy!
The teens who are the beneficieries of the concours.
A Mini and a hot ro leave the show at the end of the day.
Graceful Cadillac glides through the grounds.
Everybody loves the BMW 2002.
The Chevrolet DeLuxe trim line was marketed from 1941 to 1952 and was the volume sales leader for the market during the 1940s.
102-year-old Ed "Isky" Iskenderian with Grand National Roadster Show owner John Buck.
The Barris family has always supported the show, and brought a Batmobile this year.