Rolls-Royce Project Nightingale reimagines the electric convertible as a coachbuild work of art

There’s a certain quiet confidence that defines modern Rolls-Royce Motor Cars; a refusal to chase trends, instead shaping them with deliberate restraint. With Project Nightingale, that philosophy evolves into something far more expressive: an ultra-exclusive, all-electric coachbuilt convertible that doesn’t just reinterpret luxury, but stretches its very boundaries.

Unveiled as the first chapter in the marque’s new Coachbuild Collection, Project Nightingale is conceived as a “production concept” reserved for the brand’s most discerning patrons. Limited to just 100 units worldwide and available strictly by invitation, the car embodies a return to Rolls-Royce’s deeply personal, commission-led heritage while formalizing it into a curated series of collectible creations.

Designer: Rolls-Royce

At nearly 18.9 feet long (comparable to the Phantom), this is no conventional roadster. Its grand proportions house a two-seat, open-top configuration that merges the theatrical presence of pre-war experimental models with the silence of a modern electric drivetrain. The design draws heavily from the brand’s 1920s ‘EX’ prototypes, channeling the audacity of that era through a Streamline Moderne aesthetic defined by uninterrupted surfaces, elongated forms, and a sense of monolithic elegance.

The exterior is both familiar and radically new. A nearly one-meter-wide Pantheon grille (its widest ever) features 24 vertical slats, flanked by slim vertical headlamps that depart from Rolls-Royce’s traditional horizontal layout. Massive 24-inch wheels, the largest ever fitted to a Rolls-Royce, adopt a yacht-inspired propeller design, reinforcing the car’s fluid, maritime-inspired character. Along the sides, a singular “hull” line runs uninterrupted from front to rear, culminating in a tapered, almost torpedo-like tail that subtly hints at speed despite the car’s imposing scale.

Inside, the experience is equally theatrical but deeply considered. Inspired by the French Riviera, specifically Sir Henry Royce’s Côte d’Azur residence, Le Rossignol, the cabin blends blue and white tones with delicate pink accents. A standout feature is the “Starlight Breeze” suite, composed of over 10,500 individual lighting elements that trace the soundwave patterns of a nightingale’s song, enveloping occupants in an ambient, almost musical glow. The interior architecture remains tactile and analog at its core, with physical controls, open-pore wood finishes, and a motorized armrest that reveals hidden compartments and controls in a choreographed sequence.

Mechanically, Project Nightingale is underpinned by Rolls-Royce’s “Architecture of Luxury” platform and powered exclusively by an all-electric drivetrain, delivering what the brand describes as a uniquely serene open-top experience. While exact performance figures remain undisclosed, the emphasis is less on outright speed and more on effortless, near-silent propulsion, an approach that aligns with the marque’s evolving electric vision.

Rolls-Royce Chief Executive Chris Brownridge said, ‘We responded by bringing three things together that have never coexisted within our brand: the complete design freedom of coachbuilding, our powerful, near-silent all-electric powertrain, and a uniquely potent yet serene expression of open-top motoring – an experience that only this technology makes possible.’

With deliveries expected from 2028, Project Nightingale is both a tribute to the brand’s experimental past and a marker of its electric future. Getting your hands on this baby, however, is going to be elusive since it is limited to a very small number.