I spotted this coming up a street in the Hollywood Hills and watched it park on the street. It’s a Bugatti Veyron, the most expensive series production car in the world ($1.2 million) and one of the fastest (250+ mph guaranteed) and most powerful (1001 hp). They’ve been out a couple of years in Europe, but I’d never seen one until last week when I spotted a different one on the Ventura freeway, and then today this car. I was leaving a job site and happened to have my good camera and wide angle lens with me so I snapped the pic. It's really funny thinking of how pointless it is to drive such a super high performance car around the gridlock that is LA, but hey, the paint was really nice and shiny so at least it can be admired in traffic. If that big blue recycle bin next to the front fender scrapes the car it won't be so shiney, though, as those bins are tough on car finishes. Don't ask how I know that . . .
For those who don’t know, the current Bugatti has almost nothing at all to do with the classic “pur-sang” Bugattis which were the equivalent of Ferraris in the ‘20s and ‘30s, aside from being made in Molsheim, France. After the combined tragedies of the deaths of founder Ettore Bugatti in 1947, his son Jean in 1939, and the economic devastation of WWII, the real Bugatti firm limped into the late ‘40s and then folded. There were a couple of attempts at reviving the name in the ‘50s and ‘90s, and a small number of EB110 models were made in Italy in the ‘90s but the money ran out. VW bought the name and poured vast amounts of money into the design and manufacture of the Veyron, including building the French factory. Most experts think they lose several million dollars on each Veyron, so in at least one sense the owner got a bargain!

For those who don’t know, the current Bugatti has almost nothing at all to do with the classic “pur-sang” Bugattis which were the equivalent of Ferraris in the ‘20s and ‘30s, aside from being made in Molsheim, France. After the combined tragedies of the deaths of founder Ettore Bugatti in 1947, his son Jean in 1939, and the economic devastation of WWII, the real Bugatti firm limped into the late ‘40s and then folded. There were a couple of attempts at reviving the name in the ‘50s and ‘90s, and a small number of EB110 models were made in Italy in the ‘90s but the money ran out. VW bought the name and poured vast amounts of money into the design and manufacture of the Veyron, including building the French factory. Most experts think they lose several million dollars on each Veyron, so in at least one sense the owner got a bargain!
