
London may just have welcomed its flashest car yet - a pink Lamborghini covered in pictures of Pamela Anderson.

The £300,000 Aventador, dubbed the ‘Pam-borghini’, was spotted in London over the weekend, which has been teeming with an array of eccentrically-coloured supercars in recent weeks.

And while there have been a number of unique Arab-owned cars arriving in the capital over the past fortnight, the Lamborghini is British-registered.

It is believed the car is owned by Nitin Passi, the Manchester-based founder of retail website Missguided.

The Pam-borghini is covered in fake $100 bills along with pictures of the famous Baywatch star on the bonnet and along the roof.

Anderson recently became the face of the fashion website.

The car's appearance in London follows the arrival of a fleet of four gold cars owned by a young Saudi tourist.

The super-rich Saudi Bin Abdullah has caused quite a stir in west London in recent days as his golden Bentley, Lamborghini and Rolls Royce have been seen touring the streets and parked outside luxury hotels.

The photos and videos posted on instagram document Bin Abdullah's globetrotting lifestyle as he takes his money and his cars between the oil-rich states of the Middle East to the most exclusive streets of Europe.

In one video, he is shown chasing a camel down a steep desert slope in his £370,00 six-wheel Mercedes G63. A friend jokes: 'My drive home from school'.

Britain’s most garish car has been unveiled - a pink Lamborghini covered in pictures of Pamela Anderson, shown here parked in the capital

The £300,000 Aventador, dubbed the ‘Pam-borghini’, was spotted in London over the weekend, complete with the hashtag #pamborghini

It is believed the car, registered here in Britain, is owned by Nitin Passi, the Manchester-based founder of retail website Missguided

The Pam-borghini is covered in fake $100 bills along with pictures of the famous Baywatch star on the front and along the roof

It is believed the car is owned by Nitin Passi, pictured, the Manchester-based founder of retail website Missguided, who recently hired Anderson as the face of a new campaign

A £90,000 gold wrapped Maserati Gran Turismo is spotted in London with learner plates last week, one of several flashy cars to roam around London recently

A parking warden was approached by a security guard as he put a ticket on the car, which was parked outside a cafe in London's W1 postcode area

Another clip, posted just a few weeks ago, shows him filming himself as he drives his £350,000 Lamborghini Aventador SV in west London, followed by friends in another of his golden vehicles.

There is also a gold Maserati Gran Turismo in town - with the owner driving around with his learner plates still attached.

The owner, who is believed to be a 20-year-old Arab playboy, parked his Maserati Gran Cabrio near Edgware Road last week before entering a coffee shop with his friend.

A short-while later, the car was spotted by a traffic warden who began writing out a ticket. A large man, believed to be a friend of the car's owner, ran out of the coffee shop and approached the traffic warden.

According to an eyewitness: 'The traffic warden continued to write his ticket and the man returned to the coffee shop. They stayed in there for about an hour.

'The young guy, who must have been about 20, got into the driver's side and the friend got in the passenger seat. The friend must have had a full driving licence to supervise the learner.

'I'm not sure whether a Maserati is the best car to learn to drive in, I learned in a Fiesta.'

A gold Mercedes 6x6 worth £370,000 and a Lamborghini Aventador SV valued £350,000 are seen in London - two of four gold-coloured cars which have been seen in the captial all belonging to the same wealthy motorist

A gold Mansory Bentley Flying Spur worth £220,000, one of four gold cars owned by a wealthy Saudi who has brought his entourage of expensive cars to the UK

The maddest-looking motor is his £370,000 Mercedes G63 AMG 6x6 - a six-wheel off-roader which is more suited to the sand dunes of Saudi Arabia than the congested streets of Kensington