Taxi! A millionaire’s runaround

| 16 Feb 2026
Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

Sid James, Sir Laurence Olivier and the late Duke of Edinburgh all drove London taxis around the British capital for the sake of anonymity.

Nubar Gulbenkian, the Turkish-born Armenian oil magnate, is probably still the most famous Austin FX4 exponent, although keeping a low profile was not part of the remit for this eccentric Harrow- and Cambridge-educated Anglophile; and it appears unlikely that he ever took the wheel himself.

Born in 1896, Nubar Sarkis Gulbenkian inherited part of his fortune from his miserly father Calouste, whom Nubar famously sued for $10million when he once refused to pay for his son’s $4.50 chicken lunch out of petty cash.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

Inside the Austin’s retrimmed cabin, which now has air-con fitted

When Calouste died in 1955, most of his legacy went into a Portugal-based foundation, but the younger Gulbenkian had inherited all of his father’s business acumen and accumulated an independent fortune that easily funded his lavish lifestyle.

Like Lady Docker or the journalist Gilbert Harding, this socialite, gourmet and committed womanizer appears utterly irrelevant to 21st-century sensibilities.

Yet his exploits – and his many witticisms – captured the post-war public imagination, and he was famous enough in his day to be interviewed by John Freeman for the BBC TV show Face to Face in 1959.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

The Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca’s modern gear selector gives away the uprated powertrain

The legacy of Nubar Gulbenkian’s bespoke automobiles has kept his name on the radar over the years since his 1972 demise.

Evidently having engineered a day off school, I can clearly recall seeing his coachbuilt Austin on the afternoon magazine TV program Pebble Mill at One circa 1973, just before it was auctioned.

The taxi that Gulbenkian commissioned was bodied – by FLM Panelcraft of Battersea – in the style of a horse-drawn brougham, complete with carriage lamps above the doors and faux wicker appliqué along the flanks.

From the windshield backwards, it was designed like a miniature limousine featuring some definite overtones of a Victorian hansom cab.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

The classic Austin’s elegant door trim

The driver’s area was left open to the elements, something repeated in most of Gulbenkian’s cars – “I never feel totally dry,” he once said, “unless I can see somebody totally wet” – although there was a retractable cover to save the liveried chauffeur’s immaculate outfit.

The Lalique hood mascot and gold-plated doorhandles added to the feeling that this was an incredibly special taxi.

Ordered through Rolls-Royce/Bentley dealer Jack Barclay, the 1960 Austin was converted at a cost of £2000.

The basic FX4 was £1000, but the fact that it retained a chassis made it a good basis for a custom body.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

The Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca has been converted to run on electric power

‘Specialist’ versions of the Austin Hire Car were not unknown: in fact, a few FX4s had been converted into hearses and there was a handful of delivery vans, too.

The Gulbenkian cab became one of the most famous cars in London, as synonymous with the aging, three-times-married millionaire playboy as his monocle, his top hat and the orchid he wore in his buttonhole.

The car even featured, in cartoon form, on the back cover of his 1965 autobiography Pantaraxia, and was referenced in profiles of the tycoon (who also maintained houses in Buckinghamshire and the south of France) in Time and Life magazines.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

Even the Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca’s collapsible jumpseats are nicely trimmed

Gulbenkian, who had done brave work for British intelligence during the Second World War and was an attaché to the Iranian embassy, enjoyed the notoriety the taxi afforded him.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, he had use of a Rolls-Royce (as well as a Mercedes-Benz 600), but he employed the Austin as his town runabout for trips into the city – from his suite at the Ritz hotel – or for transport to the many functions to which he was invited as one of Britain’s wealthiest men.

“People recognize it,” Gulbenkian said. “After a party or an opening, they come and tell me where it is, and I don’t have to wait.”

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

This bespoke Austin taxi has braided grabhandles

Nubar liked big, fast, expensive cars, and always had.

As a younger man, he’d reputedly driven his 36/220 Mercedes-Benz SS around Brooklands at 100mph, although this story does not quite tie in with reports that he didn’t start driving until he was 65.

After owning many rapid pre-war sports cars, he acquired a taste for Rolls-Royces in the post-war years.

He had a chauffeur called Wooster, but would often take the wheel himself or urge his driver on from the back seat – in the late ’40s he raced his chauffeur-driven Buick Super from Estoril to Sintra against an SS100 driven by the then youthful arch-cad Alan Clark – while keeping an eye on a second speedometer fitted in the rear compartment.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

Original carriage lamps light up the Austin’s passenger doors

That was another favorite part of his limousines’ specifications, as were rear seats that converted into beds, glazed roof panels and leather-covered dashboards.

However, the truth behind the origins of this Austin are hard to pin down.

What is fairly certain is that Gulbenkian had more than one built, possibly even three.

In November 1957, The Autocar reported he had ordered a specially converted taxi through Jack Barclay.

A few months later, the same title revealed that the car would have a razor-edged brougham body, green cloth interior, folding front roof and Spirit of Ecstasy mascot.

‘A request for a Rolls-Royce radiator,’ the scribe noted, ‘has been turned down.’

Given that the Austin FX4 was not introduced until 1958, the first plans must have been based on the sit-up-and-beg FX3.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

The Austin taxi’s rear luggage trunk echoes horse-drawn broughams

Gulbenkian’s vehicles often had ‘NG’-prefixed license plates: his taxi wore NG 1 in the mid-’60s, while NG 5 was supposedly a reference to his ‘Mr Five Per Cent’ sobriquet (of which more later).

This car, 778 XUC, was minted in 1960 and is thought to be the second example.

Just to add to the confusion, I’ve seen reports that his second car was actually delivered in 1966 and cost £3500.

Other contemporary mentions suggest it had a Rolls-Royce engine fitted, but I’m going to assume it was diesel-powered from the off, or possibly delivered with a BMC 2.2-liter gasoline engine – although these were not used in FX4s and FL2s (the private-hire FX4) until 1962.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

Crisp detailing on the Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca

The first (or was it the third?) Gulbenkian FX4 did without the wicker sides and the stacked, sunken headlamp treatment, but appears otherwise much the same.

XUC was converted to left-hand drive after its early-’70s migration to California.

It was a no-reserve lot at Quail Lodge in 2015, still largely original (and apparently low-mileage) other than being fitted with the straight-six engine and four-speed ’box from a ’70s Ford.

Auctioneer Bonhams stated at the time that XUC was the only surviving Gulbenkian taxi, and that this car may have been commissioned by Nubar for his friend Paul Mellon.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

The Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca’s passenger compartment includes a vase and vanity mirror

The story is difficult to prove, but the American banker is said to have wanted to buy the one-off cab on sight, but Gulbenkian wouldn’t part with it.

Today, the taxi is part of Hyde Park hotel The Peninsula London’s fleet of 13 vehicles, which also includes a Rolls-Royce Phantom II and a variety of modern luxury machines, all painted in the group’s famous Brewster Green (now labeled Peninsula Green) livery with gold pinstriping.

Labeled the hotel’s ‘quirkiest and most playful choice’, it is part of a tradition of interesting vehicles associated with The Peninsula, which famously ordered 13 Silver Shadows in the ’70s for its Hong Kong outpost.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

A cartoon version of the Austin taxi graced the back cover of Nubar Gulbenkian’s autobiography

Like the Citroën 2CV in Paris, the tuk-tuk in Bangkok and the Jeepney at The Peninsula Manila, the Austin Brougham Sedanca – now converted to a Nissan Leaf-based battery drivetrain by London Electric Cars – will only be used for local errands rather than airport runs.

Rebuilt over six years by Ashton Keynes Vintage Restorations, the taxi retains its most obvious original features, including the carriage lamps, and has been put back to right-hand drive.

The big steering wheel and basic instrument display are true to its early FX4 origins, with just the one (driver’s) seat up front and the spare wheel under a cover on the left-hand side.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

The green color and discreet crests on the doors reveal the taxi’s new career at a swanky London hotel

The windows wind down manually and there is a sliding division between the driver and the passengers, who sit under a glass skylight on a well-stuffed West of England cloth rear seat; hopefully the stuffing will settle in time, to give a little more headroom.

There are jump-seats, glass vases in the massive C-pillars and braided grabhandles of somewhat obscene appearance.

As quiet and clean as it was doubtless noisy and smelly in its original guise, it’s hard to take umbrage at the electric conversion: if battery power makes sense in any motoring context, it is for inner-city runabouts such as this.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

The Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca taxi sports a wicker effect on its bodywork

Would Nubar have approved of this reworking of his much-loved Austin?

He would certainly have been pleased with the luxury connotations of being linked to the lavish Belgravia hotel with its views of Hyde Park Corner and the Wellington Arch.

After all, he enjoyed his wealth and knew how to live, relishing comfort and luxury in all forms.

They didn’t have heated toilet seats in his day, of course, but I’m sure he would have got used to them.

Gulbenkian, who never carried any cash, appreciated the cab’s nifty 25ft (7.62m) turning circle – a London Hackney Carriage requirement – when he was driven around the city.

Classic & Sports Car – Austin FX4 Brougham Sedanca: a millionaire’s London taxi

The coachbuilt Austin still explores the streets of London today

“I’m told it turns on a sixpence,” he boasted. “Whatever that is.”

He might not have encountered said coin of the realm, but he knew the value of it: his nickname, ‘Mr Five Per Cent’, was a reference to the shares in the likes of BP and Shell that Nubar (and his father) had held since helping to develop British oil interests in the Middle East.

Needless to say, that added up to a lot of sixpences.

Images: Jack Harrison

Thanks to: The Peninsula London (Instagram @thepeninsulalondonhotel)


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