Audi’s latest car isn’t that new at all.
The Auto Union Lucca is a V16-engined recreation of a 200mph-plus record-breaker that’s been lost since WW2.
The reborn Lucca – or Rennlimousine, as it was also known – will be seen in action for the first time at Goodwood Festival of Speed, from 9-12 July 2026.
On 15 February 1935, German ace Hans Stuck piloted the original to a top speed of 326.975kph (203.17mph) on a stretch of autostrada near Lucca, the Italian city that lent the Auto Union its name.
The original Auto Union Lucca was one of the first cars to break the 200mph barrier
Using historical documents and photographs from Audi’s archive, Ingolstadt’s heritage department commissioned British firm Crosthwaite & Gardiner to build the replica.
The revived streamliner has been tested in Audi’s wind tunnel, where it achieved a drag coefficient of 0.43Cd.
In the 1930s, the Lucca was one of the first racing cars developed in a wind tunnel: engineers used the Berlin-Adlershof Aeronautical Research Institute’s facility to create the dramatic shape.
The Auto Union Lucca’s spectacular bodywork was recreated using original drawings and old photographs