The March 10th issue of AutoWeek has several must-see garage articles. Our favorite is a profile Ralph Lauren’s garage written by Phil Berg, the same Phil Berg that penned the great Ultimate Garage books. We cannot get enough of Ralph Lauren’s car collection or Mr. Berg’s garage profiles. Thanks to AutoWeek for putting them together in this issue.
From AutoWeek:
At least each week, world-renowned fashion designer Ralph Lauren visits his cars, about half of his collection of 70-some peacefully parked in sight of the ocean on Long Island. The cars are all ready to drive, and often he’ll emerge from the secluded cluster of three garages in one of three ’96 McLaren F1s, an ’88 Porsche 959 or a Ferrari F40 and rack up some miles across the back roads.
“Once you drive the McLaren, it’s over,” Lauren says. “It’s like no car I’ve ever driven. The McLaren is like Star Wars–a hovercraft. I feel like I’m not touching the ground. It’s an experience I’ve never had before.
“Strangely enough, I really don’t like to drive the cars when people are around,” he admits. “As it turns out, I don’t really want to be seen in the cars. There’s a part of me that likes the privacy, so the more garish the car, the less I want to drive it. On weekends, depending on the weather, I love the Jaguars, the XK120 or XK140. I love the Mercedes Gullwing and roadster and the Porsches.”
In addition to the remarkable 959, he has a Carrera GT, as well as a diminutive 356 Speedster and a 550 RS Spyder. The street-going Ferraris reside in their own Long Island garage, the Porsches and Mercedes are parked two feet apart in a 10-car workshop, and the Jaguars enjoy a smaller shake-sided home of their own. They all see a lot of road use from Lauren. But he doesn’t ignore driving the race cars when he has a free weekend, according to Mark Reinwald, who is tasked with keeping the rare machines in perpetual running order. Reinwald drives each car every six weeks to ensure that they are all in shape. Reinwald sends the cars cross-country for museum tours and shows, the farthest being an Italian concours event.
Lauren created his billion-dollar fashion company on his own and paid his business dues by trusting his sense of how to look cool. He began to develop this sense when he was buying his own suits at age 12 and then honed it as he walked to his job selling ties at Brooks Brothers. His eyes would fall on the beautiful shapes in the Jaguar and Morgan Manhattan dealerships that he passed on foot. To him, these cars looked cool. When he began Polo, the business, he didn’t ride around Manhattan in a limo but drove himself in a Mercedes 280 convertible and in two black-on-black Porsche 930s, one a cabriolet. All three cars still look cool today.
Lauren explains, “I never cared about being a collector. It was not my goal. Cars were always something that I loved. It was also about the famous owners and the men who built the cars. I was fascinated reading about what Enzo Ferrari was like, what Ettore Bugatti was about, and getting a sense of why they built these cars and what their lives were like. It’s the lifestyle, the romance, all of those things together.”
In addition to the Long Island garages, Lauren has the newer sports cars and the older classic cars in Westchester, New York, but he is constructing a larger garage that will house all of his cars, plus a few future purchases, under one roof. In the workshop are posters and murals from the races of some of the cars, but otherwise automobilia and neon signs are absent, directing viewers’ attention to the cars themselves, and the new building will continue this uncluttered look.
The main reason for the new building has to do not with logistics but with climate. It was designed from scratch to help preserve some of the older cars from the cold and the salty air that come from the ocean. Many of Lauren’s cars are original and unrestored, and he has no plans to change them. Like a pair of faux-faded and authentic-oil-stained Polo jeans, they look cooler as is. At his ranch in Colorado, he has a collection of about 20 Jeeps and pickups and a faded turquoise ’57 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz, none of which is restored, all of which fit his sense of cool in their environment. The garages will remain private, although the cars occasionally can be spotted at the Pebble Beach Concours and a handful of other shows and museum displays. Lauren’s friends who are invited to the garages include Brian Redman, a Porsche road-race champion, and America’s first world champion racer and notable car restorer, Phil Hill, both of whom can help advise Lauren about the next purchases he might add to his collection.
Reinwald says that the special cars Lauren is interested in are becoming scarcer, now that there are more collectors around: “He specializes in quality, not quantity, and it’s getting harder to find the next spectacular car.”
Ralph Lauren Garage Profile – Additional Photos
[Source: Autoweek]
Ralph Lauren is an amazing clothes designer and has probably one of the most amazing collection of cars. I know this article did not mention it but he also owns a 1938 Bugatti Type 57SC Atlantic one of only 3 in the world hes owned it for at least 18 or 19 years because he won best of show at the Concours d’Elegance at Pebble Beach in 1990. Also he won another best of show at the 1993 Concours d’Elegance in his 1930 Mercedes-Benz SSK Count Trossi Sports 2-Seater and if i am not mistaken there is only one like he has. But now i could be wrong on that. But he has probably the most spectacular car collection ever. Enless someone has one that they will not show to the public. Which is very much like Ralph Lauren but he has showed some of his cars just not all of them which if he ever shows all of them it would have to be amazing i mean he has a garage full of unrestored Ferrari’s that simply amazing theres really no words for it.
I have all theses pictures as former care taker of Ralph Lauren’s cars, when they were stored in Montauk Long island
NY. The only two cars I did not have there were the 1938 Bugatti & 1930 Mercedes.
I drove every cars after careful preparation, every days ,also driving them for the NY State Inspection..
I remember driving the Alfa Monza, one summer afternoon, I got caught in a down pour rain storm, I was like in a cloud driving this 8C2300 Alfa supercharged, “normal peoples” were passing me blowing their horn, I could not care less, back in the garage, I dried carefully the car, a good “massage” with leather care product, on the seats to maintain the leather in great shape.
I really enjoyed my self,, imagine going to lunch driving the Mc Laren F1, the 1929 Bentley, etc…. unfortunately the promess of moving to a brand new spacious garage was never materialized, I answered a call from the manager, of, his Highness Prince Rainier, car collection of Monaco, I resigned to returned back home, in France maintaining his Car collection!
Monaco great place to test drive the cars,, to avoid traffic, I was driving them daily mornings at 6am, on the streets of the famous F1 GP streets another great souvenirs of my automotive career! driving down by the Lowes, turning right into the tunnel.!
Now retired enjoying my souvenirs, automotive experiences
Serge