
The Lamborghini Bravo is a concept car designed by Marcello Gandini at Bertone and was unveiled in 1974 at the Turin Motor Show. The Bravo was built as a potential successor to the Lamborghini Urraco, and its wedge-shaped design with angular lines was characteristic of the era’s futuristic automotive styling. It featured a mid-mounted 3.0-liter V8 engine and a 5-speed manual transmission. Despite its striking appearance and innovative design, the Bravo never went into production. Only one prototype was ever made, which now resides in the Bertone museum.
Lamborghini Bravo and other brilliants

In the history of Lamborghini, there were a lot of unique and interesting cars, from the Bravo to the full-fledged military SUV LM002. Studying Lamborghini cars, one can ask the question: “Why don’t so many great cars have a sequel?”

In general, you can see that Lamborghini is constantly changing the lineup, without having permanent cars (like VW Golf), for example, now they have withdrawn the production of the Huracan (except for the off-road model) and Aventador, instead presenting Ravuelto and Temerarrio and are already preparing a new electric crossover.

However, why discontinue models and make completely new cars if you can just make new generations of old ones? The fact is that the uniqueness of the design of Lamborghini cars is such that it is almost impossible to repeat it a second time without spoiling the car.

Lamborghini does the right thing by making new models and not re-releasing old ones. A good example of this is the new generation of Porsche Macan, whose old generation was extraordinary and even made it to the top 5 most beautiful crossovers.
Read more: Top 5 most beautiful crossovers

As a result, it turned into this Chinese-feeling SUV:

This generation looks much worse than the previous one, but if Porsche had called it something else, our attitude towards it would have been better since it was perceived as a completely new car. Lamborghini itself is afraid to admit that the legendary and beautiful car will have a reputation for the terrible design of someone’s unsuccessful generation.

Conclusion:
Lamborghini contains a lot of beautiful cars in its history, but most of them do not have a continuation, which is a true solution to preserve the authenticity and classicism of the car.
Future Classics: 10/10
Brand Recognition: 8/10
Design Modernity: 9/10
CarsCorn Score: 9/10