PressClub Canada · Article.
THE FINAL PHANTOM VII MARKS THE END OF AN ERA AS ROLLS-ROYCE ENTERS ITS NEXT PHASE
Tue Jan 31 08:59:00 CET 2017 Press Release
From the creation of ‘New Phantom’ in 1925, every generation of this most fabled name in luxury has served to define its moment, not only in Rolls-Royce’s history, but in world history. Quite simply, it has been the choice of the people who have defined our world and made it turn for the last 90 years.
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Author.
Marc Belcourt
BMW Group
From its introduction a little over 90 years ago, every motor car
that has borne the title ‘Phantom’ has reset the standard by which
all other luxury goods are judged,” said Torsten Müller-Ötvös, Chief
Executive Officer, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars. “As Phantom VII
gracefully leaves the stage, having defined the first chapter in the
renaissance of Rolls-Royce, we look forward to building on its
remarkable success with the imminent arrival of its successor. A
bold, new statement built on an all-new architecture promises to
light the future of the world’s most celebrated name in luxury.”
From the creation of ‘New Phantom’ in 1925, every
generation of this most fabled name in luxury has served to define its
moment, not only in Rolls-Royce’s history, but in world history. Quite
simply, it has been the choice of the people who have defined our
world and made it turn for the last 90 years.
Phantom I (or ‘New Phantom’ as it was then known) carried the
weight of expectation of living up to its eminent predecessor’s
billing as ‘The Best Car in the World’. Needless to say it
emphatically succeeded. In doing so, elevating Rolls-Royce to a place
beyond a maker of superlative motor cars, to the very standard by
which all luxury endeavours are judged.
78 years later, Phantom VII, the first Goodwood Phantom heralded
the renaissance of Rolls-Royce and established its own legend,
returning the marque to its rightful place as the only conceivable
mode of conveyance for the world’s most famous, wealthy and
influential individuals.
Today, after 13 years defining luxury, Phantom VII leaves the
stage with a fittingly artful tribute to the skills of the
craftspeople at the Home of Rolls-Royce. This very last seventh
generation Phantom signals the end of the first successful chapter in
the renaissance of Rolls-Royce under new custodianship and the
establishment of a true global centre of luxury excellence in West
Sussex, England.
Phantom – at the pinnacle of luxury for over 90 years
Like its modern successor, that first generation
Phantom was developed in an environment of fevered secrecy, borne of
the weight of expectation surrounding such an important car. Lead
engineer Ernest Hives even went as far as to scatter armoured plating
around the factory to substantiate the project’s codename Eastern
Armoured Car (EAC). This kind of fervour and global scrutiny
surrounding its development was perhaps not seen again for over seven
decades, when a small team of engineers and designers ensconced
themselves in total secrecy in a disused bank in central London. Their
task was to create a Phantom, worthy of the name and reverential to
its history, whilst making a truly bold statement on Rolls-Royce’s
pinnacle position in a new luxury landscape.
The mission would have been familiar to Hives, who himself was
tasked with creating a modern Rolls-Royce for an era of profound
change. Both Phantoms I and VII had to plot the marque’s course amidst
a backdrop of the shifting tastes and sensibilities of its wealthy patrons.
In designing Phantom VII, the task set before Ian Cameron and
his team of designers cannot be overstated. Rolls-Royce, under new
custodianship, had just five years to successfully design, develop,
engineer and test a motor car worthy of re-entering the consciousness
of a rapidly emerging yet increasingly global elite. The world was watching.
Rowing to the safety of pastiche or even tribute to Phantom I
and its successors would have been a grave error. The 21st
century’s wealthy and influential demanded authenticity and
sovereignty in the luxury houses they choose to patronise, so a
thoroughly contemporary, singular vision of Rolls-Royce luxury was the
only possible path.
3 January 2003 saw Cameron’s vision finally unveiled to the
world as the global media descended upon the marque’s factory on only
its third day of official operation. Like Hives and his ruse to keep
the press off the scent, Phantom VII was designed and developed under
a cloak of absolute secrecy. On unveiling that first car, the press
were unanimous in their reaction, praising
Rolls-Royce and its new custodians for bringing to the world a
thoroughly modern interpretation of the classic lines and proportions
that had maintained a stately presence at the world’s great occasions
for three quarters of a century.
Underneath that imposing yet elegant coachwork lay the
foundations on which the opening passages of the next great chapter in
Rolls-Royce history was built. A totally new aluminium spaceframe,
designed and engineered for strength and weight-saving, and propelled
by a magnificent 6.75l naturally-aspirated V12 Rolls-Royce engine
developed the abundant yet whisper-quiet performance that has become
the hallmark of modern Rolls-Royces.
Behind Phantom’s now emblematic coach-doors lay an exquisitely
crafted interior – realised by using only the finest materials by a
new artisanal workforce drawn from the local area’s boat-building and
saddle-making industries. These first craftspeople, part of a
workforce on that first day of just 350, served as the masters to a
burgeoning new generation of 1,700 skilled craftspeople, their careers
made possible by the success of the all-important seventh-generation Phantom.
For the first time since the age of the coachbuilder, patrons of
luxury were offered true personalisation through the marque’s Bespoke
programme, with Phantom serving as an exquisite blank canvas from
which its patrons’ boldest visions could be expressed.
Media and customer acclaim soon affirmed that, like Hives,
Cameron and his team had re-established the legend of the ‘Best Car in
the World’. It was stated at the time, that the establishment of the
marque’s centre of excellence and the concurrent development and
launch of Phantom in just five years, stood as the ‘last great
automotive adventure.’ Phantom once again represented the start of a
bold new era – a period many close to the marque acknowledge as the
most significant in its history. In just 13 years, Rolls-Royce had
established itself once again as the yardstick by which all other
luxury goods are judged.
The final Phantom VII – a study in luxury
Now, as this most significant motor car prepares to
gracefully leave the stage, it is fitting that the final Phantom VII,
a beautifully appointed extended wheelbase limousine, has been created
to celebrate the golden age of travel that Phantom defined.
This remarkable example, commissioned by a renowned contemporary
Rolls-Royce collector, perfectly serves to illustrate the
extraordinary attention-to-detail and deftness of touch that has
defined the first chapter at the marque’s home in Goodwood, West Sussex.
The art of marquetry – so beautifully used throughout Phantom’s
life – depicts a stylised 1930s ocean liner, reflecting this
particular patron’s fascination with the design and iconography of
this grand era. The nautical theme continues with the application of
tone-on-tone embroidery evoking the movement of the sea, exquisitely
applied to the interior’s Powder Blue leather.
In true Phantom style, every possible detail has been
considered. The clocks, featured in both the front cabin and the
partition wall have been designed to echo the style of the radio
clocks that adorned grand ocean liners. The Bezel, expressing 24 time
zones, sits proud of the main clock, and reminiscent of HG Well’s time
machine, allows the owner to rotate it in either direction depending
on where they find themselves in the world.
The maritime theme even extends to Phantom’s indulgent lambswool
carpets which feature a hand-cut wake effect elegantly created by the
marque’s master craftspeople – perhaps a nod to the fact that this
final Phantom has passed, leaving the world in its own wake.
The exterior is finished in a stunning Blue Velvet, completed
with a twin coachline with ocean liner motif to the shoulder, and
offset beautifully by pinstripe tyres and a solid silver Spirit of
Ecstasy. This carefully tended hand-crafted scheme completes a
stunning final expression for the last Phantom of its kind.
The completion of this very final motor car, and the
decommissioning of the Phantom production line after 13 years, sets
the stage for the introduction of Phantom VIII, underpinned by an
all-new aluminium architecture of luxury. Like its predecessor it will
advance the standards set by its illustrious forbears.
Its arrival will herald the beginning of yet another great
chapter in the history of the world’s most compelling and celebrated
name in luxury.