Aguzzoli

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Company typePrivate
IndustryAutomotive
Founded1962; 63 years ago (1962)
Founder
  • Sergio Aguzzoli
  • Luigi Bertocco
Aguzzoli & Co.
Company typePrivate
IndustryAutomotive
Founded1962; 63 years ago (1962)
Founder
  • Sergio Aguzzoli
  • Luigi Bertocco
Defunct1964 (1964)
FateDissolved
HeadquartersParma, Italy

Aguzzoli was a short-lived Italian manufacturer of racing and sports cars during the early 1960s.

Sergio Aguzzoli (12 May 1929 – 31 August 2008)[1] was born in a family of meat entrepreneurs. However, he was more interested in car racing, and in the mid-1950s he participated in various local and national competitions in Italy, including four editions of the Mille Miglia. In 1955 he had become a partner of the Alfa Romeo dealership in Parma. Around this time he started preparing go-karts, after which he decided to move on to the creation of a full-scale, handmade race car.[1]

In 1962 he and his business partner, former Ferrari technician and test driver Luigi Bertocco, founded in Parma "Aguzzoli & Co." and started designing the first sports car; Aguzzoli christened it Condor which was his nickname since his childhood.[2][3] The intention of the two partners was to use Aguzzoli's funds and Bertocco's know-how to create a few Alfa Romeo-powered race cars using a rear mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive layout, making them successful in racing, then producing a small number – about a hundred – of road-going models.[2]

Eventually, Bertocco claimed ownership of the car as its designer and maker while Aguzzoli, who had invested large sums in the project, believed the opposite. This disagreement led to the company's dissolution in 1964, after just two[2][4] (possibly three[3]) race cars built.[2] These cars were relatively successful in national-scale competitions, and continued to be deployed well after the company's closure.[3] In the end, a court ruling proved Aguzzoli right over Bertocco, but he never resumed production[2] and left the world of sports cars for good, instead following in his father's footsteps in the grocery trade.[1]

Condor

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