Yanko Design

Audi’s $1M Nuvolari Has the Same Design Problem Jaguar Had Last Year

Audi gave the world a new supercar, and on paper the Nuvolari sounds engineered for universal applause. A V8 hybrid powertrain, 987 horsepower, 499 units, and a price tag hovering around the one-million-dollar mark should have made this an uncomplicated flex. Audi has not produced a proper supercar since the R8 ended production in 2023, and the Nuvolari arrives with enough technical ambition to convincingly fill that gap. The car is named after Tazio Nuvolari, the Italian racing driver who piloted Auto Union machinery in the 1930s and whom Ferdinand Porsche himself called “the greatest driver of the past, present, and future.” Instead, the conversation has drifted somewhere far messier, into the subjective territory where prestige brands are judged hardest: taste.

Jaguar’s 2024 identity overhaul illustrated exactly how quickly a design misstep can derail a brand’s entire narrative, and that context is worth holding next to the Nuvolari. When we covered Jaguar’s rebranding and the leaked images of its new EV late that year, the core criticism was that the brand had produced a visual identity emotionally decoupled from what a Jaguar is supposed to make you feel. Audi faces a different version of that same problem. The hardware here is easy to respect. The styling is where the uncertainty begins. For some, it reads as calm confidence. For others, it feels strangely anonymous for a car meant to sit at the very top of Audi’s food chain.

Designer: Audi

The Nuvolari is the first production car to carry Audi’s new “Radical Next” design direction, developed under Massimo Frascella, the designer previously responsible for the sublimely restrained third-generation Range Rover. The exterior carries a reinterpreted Singleframe grille arranged as a grid of small angled square elements, taut carbon fiber surfacing that leaves almost no visual mass to read as drama, and a roofline that tapers cleanly into the rear without the crease work or aggressive geometry you would expect from a car in this category. The whole car is finished in Titanium, a signature color Audi has already committed to on its F1 machinery and the Concept C that previewed this design direction last year. The four rings on the rear wing are milled aluminum set flush into the carbon fiber bodywork, a detail that sounds spectacular in description. On a car this visually spare, it reads as a whisper rather than a statement.

The Nuvolari borrows the Lamborghini Temerario’s twin-turbo 4.0-liter V8, producing 800 horsepower on its own and spinning to a motorsport-grade 10,000 rpm. Three axial-flux electric motors, two on the front axle and one integrated into the eight-speed dual-clutch gearbox, push combined output to 1,001 PS. Audi claims 0-100 km/h in 2.6 seconds, 0-200 km/h in 6.8 seconds, and a top speed above 350 km/h. An F1-derived DRS rear wing deploys across three configurations, actively managing downforce and drag depending on driving conditions, while ten-piston ceramic front calipers deliver deceleration Audi says is on par with a current Formula 1 car. The chassis is an aluminum space frame wrapped entirely in prepreg autoclave carbon fiber, with forged center-lock wheels and Bridgestone Potenza Race rubber sized 255/35R-20 front and 325/30R-21 rear.

Frascella spent years at Jaguar Land Rover before taking charge of Audi’s design direction, a fact that makes the comparison to Jaguar’s recent struggles feel less like coincidence and more like a design philosophy traveling with its author. His minimalist approach was exactly right for the Range Rover, a vehicle designed to project composed authority without raising its voice. A supercar carrying 1,001 horsepower and a seven-figure price tag operates on entirely different emotional frequencies. The same cool remove that reads as confidence on a luxury SUV can read as emotional vacancy on a halo machine people are supposed to dream about. The question the Nuvolari raises is whether the taut, surface-led language Frascella brought from Solihull to Ingolstadt belongs on the most extreme car Audi has ever produced.

The 499 buyers who can afford the Nuvolari will not lose sleep over comment sections, and the production run will almost certainly sell out regardless of what design critics think. But the Nuvolari is also explicitly Audi’s first production model to carry the new design language, which means whatever signal it sends will eventually filter down into mainstream models at a fraction of the price. If the dominant reaction to a halo car is “respectful but not excited,” that is a signal worth taking seriously before it scales. Jaguar learned that simplicity without emotional conviction reads as absence rather than restraint, and the fallout was swift and public. Audi’s engineering story is airtight. The harder question is whether Frascella’s Radical Next direction carries the visual magnetism to match it.

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