Volkswagen’s relationship with Mexico got off to a fruitful start in the early 1960s, when the German automaker’s representatives realized the potential for the Latin American market. Not only was its labor force eager, the burgeoning economy was in need of its own people’s car. By the time Mexico City hosted the 1968 Summer Olympics, VW was already ingrained in the City of Palaces. Beetles were increasingly common both on the capital city’s wide boulevards and in its narrow, historic alleys. Two Beetle bodies were created using a relatively simple wrought-iron design to promote Volkswagen when the world’s athletes traveled to Mexico City. The wrought-iron cars were a lasting icon that would become ingrained in VW de Mexico lore.

A few years later, artist and master blacksmith Rafael Esparza-Prieto was asked to celebrate the car’s already monumental achievement by recreating the iconic Beetle body in wrought iron for automakers Aguascalientes’ Mexico assembly plant. So thrilled with the project was Montecito, California, Mexican restaurant owner Jose Barajas that he commissioned his own wrought-iron Beetle in the early 1980s. The material had long been associated with Mexican design, particularly in the fences and gates that surrounded every level of abode. The design Esparza-Prieto created features 2,600 individual floral-inspired curlicue designs and was crafted using only a hammer and an anvil prior to being painted white.