Iconic Vanwall name and cars to be revived

SIXTY-TWO YEARS AGO, the world first Constructors Championship Trophy was claimed by British manufacturer Vanwall. Apart from those of us of “a certain age”, today the name is almost forgotten.

However, that may be about to change.

Vanwall Group, the successor to the legendary British Vanwall motor racing team of the 1950s, has announced the renaissance of the historic name with plans to build six new continuation cars to celebrate Vanwall’s six Formula One wins in 1958.

Vanwall had already become the first British-built car to win the British Grand Prix with a British driver, with Sir Stirling Moss and Tony Brooks sharing the honours in 1957. The six victories in 1958 gave Vanwall its eternal position as the first winner of the Formula One World Constructors Trophy, and to this day, Vanwall remains the first of only two Formula One teams ever to have recorded a maximum points score in a championship season. The 19 October 1958 was the day Vanwall clinched the memorable championship win in Morocco.

A car very much in the idiom of the 50s

Only five of the continuation cars will be offered for private sale, with the sixth car forming the core of a Vanwall Historic Racing Team. Each vehicle will be painstakingly built over thousands of hours by historic racing and vehicle restoration experts, Hall and Hall in Lincolnshire, England. The faithful continuation cars will feature the powerful 270bhp (201kW), 2489cc Vanwall engine, all meticulously engineered using original drawings and blueprints from the 1950s. Each hand-built continuation car will be sold for £1.65 million ex VAT ($AU3.3 million).

In its day, Vanwall was a byword in the paddock for innovative engineering, with the Colin Chapman-designed chassis complementing the aerodynamics by Frank Costin. They pioneered, for example, the use of disc brakes rather than drum brakes in Formula One thus giving a small competitive advantage over the Ferraris. Roll the clock forwards 62 years, Vanwall Group has already commenced investigations to understand how the historic Vanwall brand DNA could translate into a vehicle for the 2020s, with studies ongoing into future road and race car programs.

It will cost you $3.3 million to sit here

Announcing the continuation cars, Managing Director of Vanwall Group, Iain Sanderson, said; “The Vanwall name is too important to consign to history. The Vanwall story is untold to many, but it is a great British tale of innovation and achievement and shows what happens when the right team come together and push themselves fearlessly to reach a clearly defined goal. On this anniversary, we think the time is right to celebrate this great British story of success. Faithfully recreating the iconic 1958 championship winning car with six 100 percent accurate and authentic continuation cars is a fitting tribute to their historic success. The DNA that made those cars so successful also serves as an inspiring foundation for the future of the Vanwall marque, which I look forward to sharing in due course.”

Sanderson is a former world champion offshore powerboat racer, as well as being an early pioneer in electric vehicles when he commissioned the Lightning GT electric supercar in 2008.

Andrew Garner, Chairman of Vanwall Group and a former Chairman of the Historic Grand Prix Cars Association, concluded, “I can still remember watching the Vanwalls at Aintree in ’57 when I was a boy and had the pleasure of sitting in one at Goodwood. I drove at all the major circuits in a Cooper T51 for many wonderful years but the Vanwall is the car I coveted. These cars will be fully race eligible and in the right hands will be unbeatable, repeating Tony Vandervell’s mission to beat the red cars!”

The heart of the Vanwall was the 2.5-litre, 270bhp engine

Vanwall Group

Vanwall was created by autocratic industrialist Tony Vandervell in the early 1950s and constructed their first Formula One cars for the 1954 season. The team achieved their first major race win in the 1957 British Grand Prix, becoming the first British-built car to win a World Championship race and going on to win the inaugural Constructors’ Championship in Formula One in 1958. The 1958 car, arguably the most important Formula One race car ever built in Britain, won six of the nine Grand Prix it entered that season. With the then rules stating that only six results counted towards the championship, the team recorded the first of only two ever maximum manufacturers points score.

The date of 19 October 1958 will always be bittersweet for Vanwall. Alongside winning the first World Constructors Trophy, team driver Stuart Lewis-Evans was severely injured in a crash during the race and succumbed to his injuries several days later.

Following the failing health of Tony Vandervell in 1958, factory support was withdrawn in early 1959. However, the dominant colour in Formula One was now green not red.

In 2013, the Vanwall trademark was acquired by Iain Sanderson and today, the Vanwall name still stirs powerful memories in those who remember its heyday.