Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

| 29 Jan 2026
Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

Private underground city parking lots conceal some amazing secret motors, but few are as surprising as this early-1950s Maserati coupe.

As we drop down to the basement-level storage facility in the British capital, the lift doors open to reveal a subtle gray, Zagato-bodied beauty conspicuously placed among bland modern cars.

Even beneath the sterile neon glow of its stark hideaway, this sleek, compact exotic stands out like a supermodel in a crowd.

Amazingly, there are no barriers to protect its delicate, hand-formed aluminum body, and you can’t help feeling that this rare 1954 Maserati 2000GT A6G/54 should be displayed across the river in the Tate Gallery.

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

The Maserati 2000GT A6G/54’s sparse interior, with broad Nardi steering wheel, large Jaeger instruments and delicate door fittings

Ugo Zagato’s team of artisans at the Via Arese works in Milan had a great eye for natural form and pretty much defined the classic coupe look in the early 1950s.

None of the 20 Zagatos were identical because details and trim continually evolved and just one chassis, 2121, had the signature ‘double bubble’ roof.

“Great designs don’t come from wanting to produce a good shape,” Zagato claimed, “they come from making cars faster and more intelligent.”

The house of Zagato may have lost that defining ‘Grinta e Sportività’ purity in its later years, but the only route for the Italian amateur racer in the early ’50s was via the famous Milanese carrozzeria.

Rivals Allemano and Frua both bodied the updated 2-liter coupe between 1954 and ’57, but none of the 40 built matched Zagato’s seductive fastback.

The owner of this twin-cam, straight-six jewel – the only 2000GT in the UK – has generously entrusted me to deliver the car solo from London to respected Norfolk-based Maserati specialist Steve Hart for its annual service.

And there are few more dramatic places to start up the Vittorio Bellentani-revised 160bhp straight-six than a silent underground parking lot.

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

The Maserati 2000GT A6G/54’s simple lines were penned by Ugo Zagato’s team in Milan, Italy

Twist the key, push the button and this thoroughbred heart – with chain-driven cams and triple Webers – barks instantly into life.

The throaty exhaust boldly fills its concrete-walled lair. Close your eyes and it could be a 250F revving up in a Monza pit garage.

Once the engine is warm, I point the car’s shapely snout towards the ramp, and can’t resist stretching the revs in first gear as it heads up to the barrier. The strident howl sounds even richer around the narrow tunnel.

Out into the Sunday night city traffic, the Maserati soon gets approving interest, none more so than from a Ducati rider who follows me for miles.

He pulls alongside at every set of lights and soaks up its alluring shape and boisterous tone.

Well, I’d do the same, because the chances of seeing another like this on British roads are minimal.

Even in the 1950s these Maserati gran turismos were mainly sold in Italy, where wealthy owners battled with rival Lancia Aurelias, Fiat 8Vs and Alfa Romeo 1900SS Zagatos for the popular GT championship.

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

The Maserati’s ‘six’ has crackle-black camshaft covers and triple Weber carburetors

Out on to a deserted dual carriageway, the 2000GT – better known as the A6G/54 – starts to come alive.

The gearbox, via the tall alloy-ball-topped lever, is a treat to work, with a rewarding mechanical feel as you slice through the gate, while the steering’s initial deadness transforms into a silky, precise action at higher speeds.

You sense that the handling is beautifully neutral on clear roundabouts, as the ‘six’ delivers strong, smooth punch.

You need no excuse to hold the revs right to 5000rpm through the gears for the buzz from that addictive yowl as the chassis holds its line neatly.

It’s not crying wolf, either: this 1954 GT is as quick as it sounds thanks to a healthy power-to-weight ratio, and it will give most hot hatches a challenge up to 80mph.

The flat leather seats offer little support, while the low roofline creates a widescreen view of the road; it all adds to the period character.

My only concern is the lack of outside mirrors, as the suspension crashes painfully over London’s cursed potholed streets.

It’s easily the most valuable car ever stashed at my home, so I’m up long before rush hour and the protracted warm-up predictably upsets the neighbors.

I choose the North Circular rather than the M25 slog, and again the pre-dawn darkness fuels Mille Miglia fantasies.

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

This Maserati 2000GT A6G/54’s pop-out doorhandle

Potholes aside, the ride is surprisingly comfortable, and there’s little roll through turns.

As I gain confidence with this glorious machine, the big gap between first and second becomes more apparent, but more disturbingly – as the early daylight fills the Spartan cockpit – I note that the oil-pressure gage needle regularly fluctuates.

Thankfully, I later learn that it’s only the relief valve that causes this worrying symptom.

The cabin is pretty minimal but better fitted-out than most competition Ferraris, with the bold Jaeger speedometer and rev counter dominating the layout behind the classic three-spoke Nardi steering wheel.

The interior door trim is enhanced by delicate aluminum handles, while the headlining is leather. Buyers clearly demanded a certain refinement for their drive to events.

By dawn, having diverted off the A1(M), I’m out on familiar Hertfordshire roads, and once more the car’s inspiring balance rewards as it blasts through some favorite bends.

Only sleepy wildfowl worry my press-on pace – not even the Maserati’s searing charge stirs them – and I’m relieved to reach wider roads.

Fortunately, the brakes are strong: there’s no hint of pull or locking up, while the pedal itself is reassuringly firm in its action.

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

This Maserati has wonderful cornering balance

Over breakfast at Duxford I review the history file.

Like several A6G 2000s, chassis 2118 was sold through the Rome Maserati dealership of Guglielmo ‘Mimmo’ Dei, who later launched Scuderia Centro Sud.

Finished in ivory, with stylish blue trim, the car was sold to hotshoe Luigi Musso’s brother Giuseppe in January 1956.

Musso never competed in the car, but Dei drove it at the Corse Lanciato hillclimb and possibly several other events.

The following year, 2118 was sold to Count Maggi Diligente, who ran a property business in Milan.

Diligente was clearly a Trident fan, because he also owned the fabulous Maserati A6GCS Pinin Farina Berlinetta.

Diligente crashed the car while competing in the 1957 Coppa della Consuma, and it went back to the factory for repair.

Both ends were crunched in the spin – those hillclimb road courses left little room for error.

The invoice details two new wheels, electrical work, a front suspension rebuild and a radiator, as well as the bodywork.

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

The Maserati 2000GT A6G/54’s trunk is filled with the spare wheel

The repairs took close to three months, and Diligente must have been shocked by the 700,000-lire bill.

With his firm already in financial difficulties, Diligente had no option but to sell the Zagato.

At that point 2118 was renumbered 2189, possibly to match its new engine or just to sway the next customer that the car was mostly new.

Still painted gray, 2118/2189 continued racing with third owner Vincenzo Ossi, mainly in Italian hillclimbs including the Bologna to San Luca event, at which it came seventh in class.

The car then had a succession of Latin owners before it ended up in Sicily, where it stayed for 14 years with Luigi Manzumi.

From 1973, a doctor drove the sleek Maserati around Rome, after which it went to Charles Reid in the USA.

Eventually, New York collector Sam Mann acquired the car and during its restoration had the body repainted red.

Subsequent owners included such discerning enthusiasts as Skip Barbour and William ‘Chip’ Connor.

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

The Maserati 2000GT A6G/54’s taut shape, with Borrani wire wheels filling the arches

The car then returned to Europe, where its following German keeper had the prudence to return the bodywork to its original color.

After a renovation by Conulato in Italy, 2118/2189 successfully completed the Mille Miglia.

Luckily for British Maserati fans, this fabulous coupe was next sold to a UK enthusiast  – who loves driving it.

As well as starring at the 2009 International Maserati Club Rally at Goodwood, the Zagato has regularly been driven on European road trips including to the owner’s wedding in France. Well, wouldn’t you?

Fans of the A6G/54 coupes included Denis ‘Jenks’ Jenkinson. Motor Sport’s ‘continental correspondent’ called at Maserati’s Modena works on the way back from Sicily in 1956 to pick up a Mille Miglia practice car for co-driver Stirling Moss.

The situation at the factory couldn’t have been further removed from the slick, efficient preparations of the previous year at Mercedes-Benz.

‘In every corner of the works were sports Maseratis in various stages of repair and disrepair,’ reported the bearded scribe.

‘There were 2-liter A6G, 1½-liter 150S, 3-liter 300S and 2-liter 200S models varying from a bare chassis frame to a complete car.

‘Rows of engines were being assembled; others were on the test-beds being run-in or power-tested. The activity was obviously going to go on all day and night.’

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

There is a big gap between first and second, but the Maserati’s metal-topped gearlever is a joy to use

This colorful description conjures perfectly the chaotic atmosphere at Maserati, which had too many commitments stretching the accommodating team.

Had it focused on the works racers, the results would have been far better.

Predictably, Jenks’ new 350S wasn’t ready for testing, so Francesco Giardini offered him the only available car: a once-pretty Zagato A6G coupe ‘that was now very weary and dirty-looking having just completed seven laps of the Mille Miglia in various hands’.

Chief mechanic Guerino Bertocchi drove Jenks out to Modena autodrome in the coupe on a wet Sunday morning and proceeded to blast around for four fast laps to check that everything was in order before waving him off to collect Moss from Milan.

Jenks adored the little Maserati’s ‘light and positive steering’ and its ‘lovely’ gearchange.

The roadholding was so good that it was ‘difficult to reach anywhere near the limit’, while the engine was ‘so lively that an eye had to be kept on the rev-counter to avoid going over the 5500rpm limit’.

Jenks reluctantly gave the car to Moss at the airport, but the only consolation was to see how well it could really go.

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

A superb set of Italian classic cars in Steve Hart’s workshop, with the Tipo 151 alongside the A6G/54 (furthest) and an Alfa Romeo TZ1 at the front

During their recce, Jenks calculated that the 2-liter Maserati set a higher average than the 130mph Mercedes-Benz 300SL test car in 1955.

He wrote: ‘Without exceeding 5500rpm (98mph), the Maserati was so much more manageable.

‘It could be flicked from side to side of the road with the minimum of effort, and in and out of the traffic with little space required while the gearbox would keep the revs up.’

After one 1000-mile lap, they arrived back at the factory having ‘developed a great regard’ for the A6G.

Such was their pace on the open roads, Jenks calculated that they’d have finished third in the previous year’s 2-liter class.

Both wanted to take the car for another lap’s practice, but it had to be prepared for a privateer, with a new engine, gearbox and rear axle!

There are few hills on our route, yet it’s easy to relate to Jenks’ vivid report.

The brakes and steering never fail to inspire, while the sure-footed handling encourages ever-faster runs through long, open sweepers. Not once does it feel unsettled.

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

The Maserati 2000GT A6G/54’s delectable profile defined the 1950s GT look

The sun is setting fast by the time we arrive at Steve Hart’s workshop – tucked away down a West Dereham back-lane – but I could have driven long into the night.

Inside this isolated unit is a Trident treasure-trove.

As well as several ‘Birdcages’, including the ex-Gregory/Daigh Camoradi 1960 Le Mans streamliner, there’s the dramatic remains of the last racing coupe, the Tipo 151.

Steve enjoys working on all classic Maseratis, particularly the A6Gs. He says: “They are beautifully made and the front suspension design carried right through to the 250F and 450S.

“The synchromesh is weak, and the gap between first and second can be frustrating on the track, but it’s fine on the road.

“With around 160bhp in such a light car, it’s no surprise that the performance is so strong.”

It’s a real wrench to leave the A6G and Steve’s fascinating workshop.

Driving home in a soulless modern, I miss the Maserati’s raucous exhaust and the cold alloy of its chunky gearlever.

As we head south, a magnificent sunset bathes the Fens.

Imagining that fading orange light kissing those sleek, handcrafted Zagato curves is almost too much.

Images: Tony Baker

This was first in our May 2010 magazine; all information was correct at the date of original publication


Factfile

Classic & Sports Car – Maserati 2000GT A6G/54: Zagato sensation

Maserati 2000GT A6G/54

  • Sold/number built 1954-’57/60 (20 Zagatos)
  • Construction steel tubular ladder chassis, aluminum body
  • Engine all-alloy, dohc 1986cc straight-six with two valves per cylinder, twin-plug ignition and triple Weber 40DC03 carburetors
  • Max power 160bhp @ 6000rpm
  • Max torque n/a
  • Transmission four-speed manual, RWD
  • Suspension: front independent, by double wishbones, coil springs rear live axle, quarter-elliptic leaf springs; Houdaille lever-arm dampers, anti-roll bar f/r
  • Steering worm and sector
  • Brakes finned drums
  • Length 13ft 5in (4089mm)
  • Width 5ft ¼in (1530mm)
  • Height 4ft 4in (1321mm)
  • Wheelbase 8ft 4in (2540mm)
  • Weight 1800lb (816kg)
  • 0-60mph 8 secs
  • Top speed 130mph
  • Mpg n/a
  • Price new £3200

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