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November 25, 2024
Bugatti and Croatian electric supercar maker Rimac to combine in joint venture

Bugatti and Croatian electric supercar maker Rimac to combine in joint venture

The new company will be called Bugatti-Rimac and will make both Bugatti and Rimac cars. Bugatti, like Porsche, is part of the Volkswagen Group. Porsche also owns a stake in Rimac.

Bugatti-Rimac will be based in Zagreb, Croatia, not far from Rimac’s current headquarters. Bugatti, meanwhile, will continue to build cars in its current home of Molsheim, France, according to an announcement from Porsche. It will continue to operate as a separate car brand although Bugatti and Rimac will jointly develop new Bugatti models, the announcement said.

Porsche began investing in Rimac Automobili in 2018 and now owns a 24% stake in the company. Porsche will directly own 45% of Bugatti-Rimac while Rimac will hold the remaining 55% stake. Bugatti is being transferred to the new joint venture by its parent company, Volkswagen Group.

“We are combining Bugatti’s strong expertise in the hypercar business with Rimac’s tremendous innovative strength in the highly promising field of electric mobility,” Porsche Chairman Oliver Blume said in the announcement.

Bugatti Chiron at Bugatti's headquarters in France
Rimac and Bugatti couldn’t have more different origins. Bugatti was founded in 1909, and made cars for royalty and celebrities, before shutting down shortly after World War II. The brand was revived in 1987, shut down again in 1995. Volkswagen recreated the Bugatti brand in the 1990s and early 2000s after purchasing the name, logo and the site of the company’s original headquarters in eastern France. Now, Bugatti assembles cars like the $3 million Chiron and the $6 million Divo, with gasoline-thirsty 16-cylinder engines, some variants of which can propel its cars to speeds over 300 miles an hour.

Rimac, on the other hand, was founded by then-21-year-old Mate Rimac in 2009. It has developed electric cars like the 1,224-horsepower Rimac Concept_One, of which only a few were made, and the new $2.4 million 1,900-horsepower Rimac Nevera, the company’s first production model. Until now, Rimac has mostly specialized in electric powertrain and battery development. It has counted Jaguar, Aston Martin, and the Swedish supercar maker Koenigsegg among its clients. Rimac is also supplying the engineering for the $2 million Pininfarina electric supercar being created by the Italian firm once famous for designing Ferraris. Rimac will continue to operate a separate division, Rimac Technology, that will continue this sort of development and engineering work for outside companies.

The joint venture with Rimac does not mean that Bugatti will produce only electric cars, Mate Rimac said, although there will be some electric vehicles Bugatti’s in the near future. Mate Rimac indicated that the Chiron’s successor model, Bugatti’s next high-performance supercar, will likely be a hybrid.

Bugatti’s line-up could be expanded to include other models that aren’t high-performance supercars, though and those vehicles could be fully electric.

In the longer term, Bugatti could produce electric hypercars like Rimac’s, Mate Rimac said, but, even then, the brands will be distinctive with Rimac focused primarily on performance and Bugatti more on craftsmanship and style.

Mate Rimac will be the chief executive of Bugatti-Rimac. Two Porsche executives, including Blume, will have board seats at Bugatti-Rimac. The company is expected to be established by the end of the year.