by Wallace Wyss –

As a former owner of a Volkswagen Karmann Ghia convertible, which to me was better than the Porsche Convertible D I owned, so I sold the Porsche, (big mistake appreciation wise, I’ll admit). I am always interested in the possibility of Volkswagen bringing the design back.

Originally the Karmann Ghia was designed by Ghia in 1955 but the bodywork was done by Karmann in Germany and hundreds of thousands were sold in coupe and convertible form.

Eventually there was a Euro only version, the Type 34, designed by Tom Tjaarda, a designer from America who was working in Europe for his whole design career. That was mostly a coupe but there were a few prototype convertibles.

And then there’s this one, which copies much of the Mangusta one-off Spyder designed by Giugiaro for DeTomaso. This Karmann Ghia convertible has the same fixed side frames for the windows that the ‘Goose did.

It even has a similar side profile. I would say the side is its best view but the front and rear are negligible by comparison. The front even looks like a series 2 Corvair convertible.

Now this particular Karmann Ghia convertible is somewhat of a mystery car. There is no doubt that it is designed by the incomparable Giorgetto Giugiaro who started out at the age of 19 at Italian coachbuilder, Bertone, in December 1959. For Bertone he did many famous designs including the Alfa Romeo 2000 Sprint, the Gordon Keeble GT (and the car that copied it, the Iso Rivolta), the Aston Martin DB4 GT Jet and the Iso Grifo.

He left Bertone for Ghia in late 1965, where, in only a little over two years he did a lot of memorable cars including the Maserati Ghibli, the DeTomaso Mangusta and others that influenced the direction of car design.

For a recent show in England called VolksWorld, Karmann sent three prototypes to display–the 1953 Karmann Ghia prototype that launched the product line, this 1965 Karmann Ghia convertible prototype that never progressed beyond the concept stage and a 1965 Karmann Ghia hatchback, based on the larger Type 34 Karmann Ghia, the fastback also never seeing production.

Why didn’t the convertible get built? I say politics.

In early 1967 Rowan Controllers, the company owned by DeTomaso’s wealthy in-laws, bought Ghia, and Alejandro De Tomaso became president. It was bad enough for the other executives that he had been working there but with DeTomaso as boss, there was a race for the exit, and both the general manager, Giacomo Moro, and the head designer, Giugiaro, left. Giugiaro then founded his own styling studio, Italdesign, in late 1968.

When DeTomaso and the Haskells, who owned Rowan, sold part of Ghia to Ford in 1970 and all of it by 1973, Ghia evolved from a company that could build a prototype from the ground up to merely being a name used for merchandising fancy interiors. Of course they never had the production capacity after 1970, even the Panteras being made at the Vignale plant DeTomaso also owned. But Ford liked owning Ghia for a time so they could say various models were designed in Italy.

This unique car got lost in the meantime, but apparently Karmann had paid for it so it remained in their collection.

But it was a good calling card for Giugiaro and later on when VW wanted some new designs, they hired Giugiaro at his new firm, who did the Scirocco’s design, and the huge volume-seller, the Mk1 Golf Cabriolet. Volkswagen bought Italdesign in 2010 and Giugiaro recently left VW and has started a new design company.

Now it’s difficult to imagine a prototype car being worth more than $100,000 if it’s VW-based but I think the name “Giugiaro” has to be attached to the phrase “one off” and then it has that sort of upside potential. Not that Karmann is selling it. It’s just interesting to know the turns in the road that were not taken, I think the Karmann Ghia would be with us today had this car been green lighted for production.

Let us know what you think in the Comments.