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▲This is the man we can thank for such  good-looking vehicles: Italian-born French automobile designer and manufacturer Ettore Bugatti, who founded Automobiles E. Bugatti in 1909.
▲After WWII, Bugatti designed and planned to build a series of new cars, including the Type 73 road car (pictured) and the Type 73C single seat racing car. However, only five Type 73 cars were ever built.
▲Pictured is the interior of a Bugatti Type 57S Atalante. Just 710 examples of Type 57s were built. The Type 57S/SC variants are some of the most iconic Bugatti cars.
▲The Chiron's plush, high-tech interior.
▲The "Black Car" is a one-off special introduced at the 2019 Geneva International Motor Show. While its design is based on the Chiron, the overall aesthetic is an affectionate nod towards the Type 57 SC Atlantic from the 1930s.
▲...but it can achieve a staggering top speed of 254 mph (408 km/h)!
▲But even that price tag pales in comparison to the €16 million (US$18 million) this single-seater concept car costs to buy. Only one Gran Turismo exists, and has so far been owned by two very wealthy individuals.
▲Bugatti has confirmed that the car is still in production, and will not be released for another two years. But, wait for it... anyone wanting one of these in their backyard will have to part with an eye-watering €11 million (US$12.5 million), making this the most expensive production car in the world.
▲In 1926, Ettore Bugatti made a half-scale Type 35 roadster for his son Roland's fourth birthday. The Baby Bugatti was all-electric and included a leather seat and wrapped aluminum dashboard, just like the full-sized Type 35.
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Very few of us will ever be able to afford a real-life Bugatti. But Lego has the next best thing—a model kit, which perfectly recreates the cutting-edge Chiron supercar. However, this gift still costs a whopping €380 (US$430).

See also: Common mistakes you're making while driving. 

▲Speaking of which, only the super rich can afford a Bugatti, people like Hollywood actor Jamie Foxx, who had his Bugatti Veyron's bodywork customized in gold.
▲When the "Terminator" is not burning rubber on his Harley, he too enjoys cruising around Tinseltown in a Bugatti Veyron.
▲The Type 35 chassis and body were reused on the Type 37 sports car.
▲Kendall Jenner at the wheel of a Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport Vitesse.
▲Simon Cowell flashes a characteristic toothy grin as he takes his Bugatti Veyron out for a spin.
▲The Veyron's bespoke interior provides a luxurious drive.
▲Jean Bugatti's death marked a watershed moment in the company's fortunes, but it was the passing of Ettore Bugatti in 1947 that effectively closed the door on the business. By 1952, Bugatti had ceased operations.
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Under Ettore Bugatti, the company was renowned for both the level of detailed engineering in its automobiles...

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...and the aesthetic manner in which car designs were executed, influenced perhaps by the fact that Ettore's father was a celebrated Art Nouveau furniture and jewelry designer.

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The company's premier race car of the 1930s, the Bugatti Type 51 series included the Type 59. The model pictured is also from the Ralph Lauren collection.

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In 1999, this car was purchased by Volkswagen AG (the current owner of the Bugatti brand) for a reported US$20 million, a figure today worth US$31 million when adjusted for inflation.

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At the Paris Motor Show in 1919, Ettore Bugatti exhibited three vehicles, including a Type 13 with a racing body (pictured). This was the first true Bugatti car.

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Created from a design by Jean Bugatti, son of founder Ettore, Type 57s were built from 1934 through 1940. Pictured is a 1938 supercharged version, which today belongs to fashion designer Ralph Lauren.

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In 1929, a Bugatti won the first-ever Monaco Grand Prix. Bugatti also won the 24 hours of Le Mans twice, in 1937 and 1939.

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Produced in the 1930s, the Bugatti Type 46, and later Type 50, were large enclosed touring cars.

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Better known as the Royale, Bugatti's large luxury series was built from 1927 to 1933. These are ultra rare models: only three of the seven made were sold, and there are just six left in the world. The Coupé Napoleon pictured was Ettore Bugatti's personal vehicle.

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This beast is powered by the same 8.0-liter quad turbocharged W16 engine from the Chiron. However, the 7-speed dual-clutch gearbox and the all-wheel-drive system have been seriously revised.

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The emblematic Type 35 was the most successful of the Bugatti racing models, winning over 1,000 races in its time.

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The eldest son of Ettore Bugatti, Jean Bugatti was responsible for much of the Type 41 Royale design and four bodies for the Type 57. He also frequently tested the company's prototypes. Sadly, he was tragically killed in 1939 while road-testing a Type 57 tank-bodied racer.

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Evolved from the Bugatti 8-cylinder line introduced in 1922, the Type 43 made headlines as the world's first 100 mph (161 km/h) production car.

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The Bugatti brand revival began in 1987 as Bugatti Automobili S.p.A. During this period, the Bugatti EB110 was introduced. Formula One World Champion driver Michael Schumacher was one of the first to purchase an EB110, this in 1994.

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The successor to the Veyron, the Bugatti Chiron made its debut in early 2016. In a world-record-setting test, the Chiron reached 249 mph (400 km/h) in 32.6 seconds. It took 9.4 seconds to brake to standstill!

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Just 20 examples of this car were produced. A limited edition based on the Chiron Sport, the Ans was developed to celebrate 110 years of Bugatti. 

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It will cost you a cool €2.4 million (US$2.8 million) to drive one of these out of the showroom. No problem for some: the first 200 cars were sold before the first delivery of the vehicle.

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However, Bugatti's Super Sport model is the boss of boost. It has a 267 mph (431 km/h) top speed, making it the fastest production road car in the world at the time of its introduction in 2010.

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Volkswagen Group acquired the Bugatti brand in 1998. Its first regular-production vehicle was the Bugatti Veyron EB 16.4, named after French racing driver Pierre Veyron.

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The Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Grand Sport Vitesse can accelerate from a standstill to 62 mph (100 km/h) in 2.6 seconds. On normal roads, the Vitesse is electronically limited to 233 mph (375 km/h)...

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Exquisitely designed and precision-engineered, a car made by Bugatti is the last word in high-end performance automobiles. Enjoying racing success in the 1920s and '30s, the company achieved equal fame with its road cars, built in a peerless, artistic manner and known for their reliability. A mid-1990s revival saw Bugatti claim its place as one of the most luxurious car brands in the world, and today owning a Bugatti is the ultimate status symbol.

Browse this gallery and take a drive through the history of one of the most beautiful car brands on the planet.

Driving Bugatti: Boost, beauty, and bling

The ultimate status symbol

26/08/24 por StarsInsider

LIFESTYLE Cars

Exquisitely designed and precision-engineered, a car made by Bugatti is the last word in high-end performance automobiles. Enjoying racing success in the 1920s and '30s, the company achieved equal fame with its road cars, built in a peerless, artistic manner and known for their reliability. A mid-1990s revival saw Bugatti claim its place as one of the most luxurious car brands in the world, and today owning a Bugatti is the ultimate status symbol.

Browse this gallery and take a drive through the history of one of the most beautiful car brands on the planet.

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