The London Concours opened its doors June 5 to a crowd of thousands for the first day of the event. Hosted at the Honourable Artillery Company, a five-acre oasis of green close to Bank, the event played host to the most incredible collection of vehicles ever gathered in the city of London.
In total, around 130 cars were on display across seven classes and three major features. The main concours event classes include ‘The Icons’, ‘The Innovators’, ‘Great Marques – Ferrari, ‘Great Marques – Jaguar’ and ‘The Outlaws’. Each of the classes was packed with rarities, from the McLaren F1 and Ferrari 250 GT Tour de France to the Bugatti Veyron Super Sports and Lotus 99/T championship-winning Formula One car, but there could only be one ‘Best in Show’.
The London Concours’ expert committee of judges picked an extraordinarily well-preserved C-Type with impeccable heritage as ‘Best in Show’. This particular C-Type has played its role within Jaguar’s esteemed racing heritage, appearing in the Monaco Grand Prix, driven by Tommy Wisdom, and later Stirling Moss who drove it for much of his 1952 season. It’s presented at the London Concours in its original livery from the 1953 Mille Miglia.
The judges, led by members of the London Concours Steering Committee, not only awarded an overall winner, but a winner of each class, as well.
These are the winners:
Great Marques – Ferrari, sponsored by ISAIA– Ferrari 166 Inter
Great Marques Jaguar, sponsored by Truefitt & Hill– Jaguar C-Type
The Icons, sponsored by Footman James– Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost
The Innovators, sponsored by Montres Breguet– Lotus 79
Made in Germany, sponsored by Geely– Volkswagen Golf GTI
The Outlaws, sponsored by Concours of Elegance– Lancia Aurelia B20 GT ‘Outlaw’
The Lost Marques, sponsored by Rémy Martin – Bristol 404
Best in Show– Jaguar C-Type
Outside of the main concours event, there were plenty of other astonishing cars on display. A special feature celebrates the Lamborghini Miura’s show-stealing appearance in the opening scene of The Italian Job, with a gathering of seven incredible examples. On the lawns of the HAC, guests were able to see the full spectrum of the Miura line-up, including P400S, SV and Jota models.
The evo and Octane Supercar Paddock brought together supercar originals and their modern day successors. The McLaren F1 lined up next to the McLaren P1, the Aston Martin DBS joined the DBS Superleggera and the Ferrari 250 GT Lusso was displayed alongside the GTC4Lusso.