The Maserati Gran Turismo Zeda Is A Colourful Last Hurrah For An N/A Hero

As Gran Turismo production draws to a close, Maserati has celebrated its long-lasting V8 tourer with a special model
The Maserati Gran Turismo Zeda Is A Colourful Last Hurrah For An N/A Hero

The Maserati Gran Turismo is a true survivor of the motoring world. It’s clung on in there for 12 years, still rocking a naturally-aspirated V8 while rivals have downsized and sprouted turbochargers.

It’s a dinosaur by all accounts, but a loveable one. And so, now Maserati has finally ended production, we can’t help but be a little sad. Happily, to ease our grief, a special model has been created.

The Maserati Gran Turismo Zeda Is A Colourful Last Hurrah For An N/A Hero

The Maserati Gran Turismo Zeda is a one-off creation which will tour the world while the replacement is cooked up. It’s finished in “futuristic exterior shades” which according to Maserati “tells the story of the dawn of a new era through colours and materials”. It’s designed to be a “bridge which connects the past, the present and the future of the Brand,” the company says.

That ‘future’ will involve electrification, with certain versions of the next Gran Turismo to be purely battery-powered. Internal combustion will still be on the agenda, however.

The Maserati Gran Turismo Zeda Is A Colourful Last Hurrah For An N/A Hero

Along its flanks, the Zeda changes not just in colour (blue to black to white) but also in finish. The surface shifts from light satin to what Maserati dubs a “burnished ‘metallurgic’ effect”. It’s an unusual-looking thing, but since it’s not on sale, it doesn’t need to convince any punters to depart with their cash. It’s all about maximum visual impact.

Mechanically, nothing has changed, so there’s still a 4.7-litre Ferrari-built V8 under the bonnet. It develops 455bhp, which is sent to the rear wheels via a six-speed automatic gearbox - an ancient ZF unit which will go out of production along with the Gran Turismo.

The Maserati Gran Turismo Zeda Is A Colourful Last Hurrah For An N/A Hero

The now-empty production line won’t stay dormant for long - it’s already being thoroughly reworked for the Gran Turismo’s successor, which will be launched in 2020. It’ll be a smarter and no doubt superior machine, but will it sound quite so wonderful? We remain doubtful.

Comments

That_1_Guy

‘bout time, it’s exterior aged well but that interior needs to go.

11/12/2019 - 09:51 |
6 | 0

What’s wrong with it? comfy seats never go out of style

11/12/2019 - 19:20 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

The Maser GT has by far the most soulful exhaust note of anything else on the road.

Sure, there are more visceral noises out there but whenever I hear a GranTurismo, I immediately want one.

11/12/2019 - 09:51 |
16 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

“whenever I hear a GranTurismo, I immediately want one.” You’ve said everything, this is about passion: how a perfect noise make a perfect car? But we know this is not the perfect car instead.

11/12/2019 - 11:29 |
0 | 0
ThatWeirdGinger

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Thought I’d seen that comment somewhere 😁

11/12/2019 - 14:33 |
3 | 0
DL🏁

When you found some bodypanels on the scrapyard but cant afford a paintjob

11/12/2019 - 12:50 |
4 | 6
Anonymous

The death of N/A V8 GT cars like this makes the Lexus LC500 all the more surprising and special to me

11/12/2019 - 14:14 |
9 | 0
ferrarman11

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I agree. Honestly don’t know why it’s not very popular in the car community. There’s some really good looking modified ones out there

11/13/2019 - 20:56 |
2 | 0
Tomislav Celić

Too bad the build quality is garbage

11/12/2019 - 16:56 |
1 | 0

Well aren’t you just a ray of sunshine

11/12/2019 - 19:21 |
2 | 0
Wogmidget

Damn, the list of production cars I really want seems to be shrinking every day

11/12/2019 - 19:22 |
0 | 0

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