A 1967 Lamborghini Miura once given to Jay Leno for nothing has surged in value, now appraised at more than $2.6 million.
The Lamborghini Miura, often hailed as the world's first supercar, played a pivotal role in shaping the supercar market. With ...
No Monterey Car Week would be complete without the auction sale of at least one Lamborghini Miura. Like a Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Gullwing or a Porsche 911 Carrera RS, a Miura transcends time, sparking ...
John's grandfather arrived in America in the late 1950s and started working and saving money. He eventually bought the gas station where he had worked ...
Lamborghini got the whole supercar ball rolling by showing the Miura barenaked during the 1965 Turin Motor Show.
Lamborghini’s naked Miura chassis reveal in 1965 became the blueprint for the first supercar, shaping modern performance engineering for decades.
This rare Miura SV, one of only five converted at the factory to Jota specification, promises to be the most expensive Lamborghini ever sold at auction… if it meets its pre-sale estimate of $2-2.6 ...
This 1970 Lamborghini Miura spent long 40 years parked in its owner's living room (yes, living room, you read that right!). The owner finally decided to sell it. However, the men who went to retrieve ...
Everybody knows the Lamborghini Miura, arguably the world’s first proper supercar, but how about the story behind it? Our favorite storyteller Harry Metcalfe got his hands on a lovely lime green Miura ...
A very rare 1968 Lamborghini Miura used in the film The Italian Job (not the 2003 remake featuring Edward Norton and Mark Wahlberg) recently resurfaced after originally being lost for several decades.
When it comes to classic supercars, at first glance, it seems difficult to improve on the Lamborghini Miura. But as graceful and sleek as the original design was, Lamborghini itself continuously tried ...
In the early days of Lamborghini, engineers Gian Paolo Dallara, Paolo Stanzani, and Bob Wallace wanted to build a race car. Feruccio Lamborghini wasn't interested, but he gave the engineers, all in ...