- Car - Motorcycle - Scooter -
Lotus 2011
Evora S
Elise
Lotus 2010
Exige S Type 72
Elite Concept
Elan Concept
Elise Concept
Esprit Concept
Eterne Concept
Exige S
Exige Cup 260
Evora Type 124 Endurance Racecar
Evora Carbon Concept
Evora 414E Hybrid Concept
Evora
Elise Club Racer
Lotus 2009
Exige Cup 260
Eco Elise
Lotus 2008
Ice Vehicle Concept
Exige Sprint
Exige S 240
Exige Cup 260
Europa SE
Europa Diamond Edition
Elise SC Clark Type 25
Elise SC
Lotus 2007
Hot Wheels Concept
Exige S
Elise S
Elise R
2-Eleven
Lotus 2006
Exige 265E Concept
Europa S
Lotus 2005
Exige
Elise
Circuit Car
Lotus 2004
Elise
Lotus 20025
Esprit V8
Elise
Lotus 1999
Elise
Lotus 1996
Elise Type 49
Elise 160
Elise
Lotus 1980
Esprit Turbo
Lotus 1973
Elite
Lotus 1972
Esprit Concept
Lotus 1965
Europa
Lotus 1962
Elan
ABOUT LOTUS
Lotus is currently owned by Proton who took over after the bankruptcy of former owner Bugatti in 1994.
The company moved to a purpose built factory at Cheshunt in 1959 and since 1966 the company has occupied a modern factory and road test facility at Hethel, near Wymondham. This site is the former RAF Hethel base and the test track uses sections of the old runway.
Chapman died of a heart attack in 1982 at the age of 54, having begun life an innkeeper's son and ended a multi-millionaire industrialist in post-war Britain. The car maker built tens of thousands of successful racing and road cars and won the Formula One World Championship seven times. At the time of his death he was linked with the DeLorean scandal over the use of government subsidies for the production of the DeLorean DMC-12 for which Lotus had designed the chassis.
In 1986, the company was bought by General Motors. On 27 August 1993, GM sold the company, for £30 million, to A.C.B.N. Holdings S.A. of Luxembourg, a company controlled by Italian businessman Romano Artioli, who also owned Bugatti Automobili SpA. In 1996, a majority share in Lotus was sold to Perusahaan Otomobil Nasional Bhd (Proton), a Malaysian car company listed on the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange.
The company also acts as an engineering consultancy, providing engineering development—particularly of suspension—for other car manufacturers. The lesser known Powertrain department is responsible for the design and development of the 4-cylinder Ecotec engine found in many of GM's Vauxhall, Opel, Saab, Chevrolet and Saturn cars. Today, the current Lotus Elise and Exige models use the 1.8L VVTL-i I4 from Toyota's late Celica GT-S and the Matrix XRS.
The company is organised as Group Lotus, which is divided into Lotus Cars and Lotus Engineering.
Michael Kimberley took over as Acting Chief Executive Officer of the Company and its Group from May 2006. He currently chairs the Executive Committee of Lotus Group International Limited ("LGIL") established in February 2006, with Syed Zainal Abidin (Managing Director of Proton Holdings Berhad) and Badrul Feisal (non-executive director of Proton Holdings Berhad). LGIL is the holding company of Lotus Group Plc.
Kimberley retired as CEO on 17 July 2009 and was replaced as CEO by Dany T Bahar on 1 October 2009. Bahar was formerly Senior Vice President, Commercial & Brand for Ferrari SpA where he was responsible for worldwide road car sales and after sales business, overall road car and F1 marketing activities, licensing, and merchandising business.
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