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A 180-Piece Slice of Renault History Goes Public in the December 2025 Flins Sale
Renault is preparing for one of the biggest heritage moves in its 125-year history. In 2027, the brand will open a new public museum at its historic Flins-sur-Seine site near Paris. For the first time, Renault’s full collection—cars, concept vehicles, artwork, prototypes, archives, and industrial objects—will be displayed together in a dedicated space. To make room and refine the story it wants to preserve, Renault is streamlining its internal fleet to around 600 key vehicles


1937 Maserati Siluro 4CM Carenato
The Maserati Siluro 4CM Carenato was a streamlined land speed record car built in 1937 by Carrozzeria Viotti. Designed by Mario Revelli...


1942 L'Oeuf Electrique Concept Car
The 1942 L'Oeuf Electrique Concept Car is a one-off creation by Paul Arzens, an industrial designer.


1937 Daimler Shooting Brake
In May 1937, an order was placed for a new Daimler Shooting Brake to be delivered before King George VI visited Balmoral that summer....


1937 Austin 18 Shooting Brake
Photographed in 2013 in Aylesford, England, is the 1937 Austin 18 Shooting Brake. If more is known about any of these "shooting brakes,"...


1937 Rolls-Royce Phantom III Shooting Brake
This 1937 (3CP134) started life as a Vanden Plas DHC. As a shooting brake, it attracted Andy Warhol, who owned it in the '70s. It is...


1937 Bentley 4 1/4-Litre "Woodie" Shooting Brake
Chassis number 'B142JD' was initially bodied as an all-weather tourer by Vanden Plas. The Bentley was registered as 'DLO 934' (a London...


1937 Hispano-Suiza K6 "Break de Chasse"
In France, "Woodies" had considerable snob appeal, and Franay rebodied several Rolls-Royces in the late forties, as well as this 1937...


World's Largest "Shooting Brake" Archive (Part 1 of 3)
The auto industry hasn't a single universal definition for a "shooting brake." Long story short, there's confusion between what...


1922-1939 Austin 7
The Austin 7 is an economy car that was produced from 1923 until 1939 in the United Kingdom by Austin. Approximately 250,000 units were...
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