RE: Is the Bovensiepen Zagato finally an M4 to crave?

RE: Is the Bovensiepen Zagato finally an M4 to crave?

Today

Is the Bovensiepen Zagato finally an M4 to crave?

Alpina as we know it is gone. Bovensiepen Automobile takes up the reins with a new coach-built 611hp GT


The question of what the Bovensiepen family - erstwhile owners of Alpina - would do next has been emphatically answered. Using Villa d'Este Concorso d'Eleganza as a backdrop, and just a day after BMW revealed the new V8-powered Speedtop, the newly established coachbuilder, using the famous surname as a standalone brand for the first time, revealed the Bovensiepen Zagato - a 611hp grand tourer powered by a 3.0-litre straight-six. What a way to start, eh? 

The second part of the name is no coincidence, of course: the famed Italian design studio is responsible for the car’s styling, and the collaboration - ‘bringing together the DNA of two families’ - is clearly elemental in making the new model a reality. The other element, plainly (though the firm doesn’t explicitly acknowledge it) is the recognisable underpinnings of this ‘masterpiece of contemporary coachbuilding’ - the current BMW M4. 

While that might not necessarily be the starting place most of us would choose for a new GT car, if anyone is well-placed to make it happen, it is a company staffed by former Alpina engineers. Certainly Bovensiepen is making all the right noises: the chosen characteristics (including 516lb ft of torque) of the familiar 3.0-litre engine are said to have been refined ‘in countless hours’ of testing, and preliminary data suggests that 0-62mph in 3.3 seconds and a top speed beyond 186mph will be part of the Zagato’s remit. 

That the car exceeds the power output and the quoted performance of the current M4 CS, pointedly suggests that Bovensiepen is happy to tread where Alpina previously wouldn’t. Elsewhere it seems the old tuner’s approach has very much carried over: the Zagato gets specially developed Damptronic dampers from Bilstein to ‘help deliver Fine Driving’, components that have been further optimised in-house for what the firm says is a ‘special “Gran Truismo” driving experience that let’s owners choose between ‘Comfort’, ‘Sport’ and ‘Sport Plus’ drive modes. 

All are likely enhanced (and better defined) by the presence of a newly developed Akrapovic titanium exhaust system said to reduce back pressure while weighing only 22kg - around 40 per cent lighter than the standard alternative. The forged 20-inch aluminium wheels are claimed to be lighter, too - although not to the extent that the new body must be, with Bovensiepen suggesting that it is ‘made almost entirely of carbon fibre’. 

Evidently, this novelty has kept the kerbweight in check rather than resulting in any revelatory difference (the company reports a DIN figure of 1,875kg for the Zagato) although it’s worth pointing out that would make it more than half a tonne lighter than the newly hybridised Bentley Continental GT Speed, likely a model that Bovensiepen now considers a direct rival. Certainly the luxuriousness of the leather-clad interior (while sharing all its prominent architecture with the M4) suggests that the new firm is targeting exactly the same kind of well-heeled buyer. 

Much will depend on what people make of the new look. “It‘s a kind of mixture of Italian flair, a kind of sexy and soft design, and a German, very solid, almost architectural structure… it is a beautiful blend of these two automotive cultures, I would say,” reckons Norihiko Harada, Zagato’s Chief Designer. That the GT is considerably better looking than the underlying M4 is hardly a revelation; though it does seem to have better use of the proportions, and the ‘Double Bubble’ curvature of the roof and rear window (a Zagato signature) are likely to be more appreciable in the flesh than in studio pictures. 

At any rate, we won’t have long to find out how successful the coachbuilding job has been: the pricing and production numbers for the newcomer will be released before the end of the year ahead of first deliveries in the second quarter of 2026. With the production time of each (highly customisable) example said to extend beyond 250 working hours at Bovensiepen’s facility in Buchloe, it would be fair to assume that the cost will be considerable - though not necessarily an impediment to the people who were buying flagship Alpina variants. If the Zagato appeals to them, the new venture will be off to a flyer.


Author
Discussion

ducnick

Original Poster:

2,021 posts

256 months

Yesterday (17:35)
quotequote all
Historically Zagato have never been the last word in good looking cars, preferring to focus in light weight, aerodynamics, and edgy styling. Most Zagato creations have looked arguably worse than the base cars they derive from. There are very few exceptions to that rule. (Maserati A6G Zagato excluded)The fact that this one is better looking than the base car, shows how bad modern BMW’s look.

Edited by ducnick on Saturday 24th May 17:39

Gruntled

142 posts

92 months

Yesterday (17:37)
quotequote all
Absolutely stunning. So glad the Alpina legacy lives on, and in such a fashion. Definitely on my “want” list.

ex-devonpaul

1,418 posts

150 months

Yesterday (17:41)
quotequote all
Wow, a great improvement.


Although they could just have started at the front and stopped once they'd done the grill.

disco666

352 posts

159 months

Yesterday (17:45)
quotequote all
But they have always been distinctive, and always instantly recognisable as Zagato.
This one, not so much. Unusually understated. I guess they know their target market.
Personally I like it, especially the interior, but I wish it had a little more Zagato bling. Especially if I was considering paying the no doubt huge price premium.

Deessee

52 posts

152 months

Yesterday (17:52)
quotequote all
Very cool it appears to have lost a b-pillar but who in their right mind would choose this over a Conti GT Speed? Highly specced regular M4 or E53, definitely, but not the next few classes up. Not on your nelly.

Love Alpina of old and it’s fantastic that their engineering ethos lives on.

SmithCorona

807 posts

42 months

Yesterday (18:01)
quotequote all
I think that's awful, looks like it's designed by a bloke in a shed, actually it looks like a Grand Theft Auto pastiche. Blue interior is nice though.

mclwanB

619 posts

258 months

Yesterday (18:04)
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It may just be me but there is an awful lot of original Hyundai Ioniq in those lights and grill...

Grumbler

217 posts

121 months

Yesterday (18:18)
quotequote all
Blimey. That interior is really, really blue. Bit much in any colour, but that's particularly nasty.

Andy83n

522 posts

75 months

Yesterday (18:20)
quotequote all
Will sell 11 cars because of the stupid name

UnfortunateUserName

233 posts

148 months

Yesterday (18:27)
quotequote all
More body kit than coach build. Too many unresolved details and just not coherent.

Bill

55,501 posts

268 months

Yesterday (18:35)
quotequote all
ex-devonpaul said:
Wow, a great improvement.


Although they could just have started at the front and stopped once they'd done the grill.
They have, haven't they? Just stuck a Peugeot grille on.

Wheel Turned Out

1,359 posts

51 months

Yesterday (18:37)
quotequote all
Bluemaggeddon is certainly...a choice.

sutts

1,005 posts

161 months

Yesterday (18:43)
quotequote all
Very Peugeot like at the front. I would still much prefer a B3 over this.

Robertb

2,642 posts

251 months

Yesterday (18:56)
quotequote all
Front looks a bit generic… reminded me a bit of a Peugeot too!



Edited by Robertb on Saturday 24th May 18:58

Paul_B

836 posts

189 months

Yesterday (19:14)
quotequote all
Terrible. That's my comprehensive review.

cerb4.5lee

36,442 posts

193 months

Yesterday (19:43)
quotequote all
I do like the carbon trim and the headlights. cool

ajprice

30,483 posts

209 months

Yesterday (19:47)
quotequote all
I like that a lot, maybe not with everything blue though. It fixes the face, it's got the Zagato bubble roof, and smooths out a lot of the rest of the car. Nice.

Bencolem

1,121 posts

252 months

Yesterday (20:03)
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I’m not alone then - thought it was a new Peugeot from the front.

Tango13

9,404 posts

189 months

Yesterday (20:32)
quotequote all
I like it but not in that colour scheme, I'll take one in metallic green with a mostly black leather interior.

matrignano

4,655 posts

223 months

Yesterday (20:37)
quotequote all
I like the wheels. Are they gonna sell them as part of an accessories range?