Broad Arrow Auctions is presenting an ultimate expression of automotive creativity, the 1998 Lamborghini Pregunta, at the inaugural Zoute Concours Auction on October 10th 2025. Widely regarded as the final Lamborghini concept car to be built on a pure Lamborghini platform, the Pregunta is truly a unique piece of the manufacturer’s storied legacy.
Set to be offered for the first time in over a decade at the inaugural Zoute Concours Auction, the Pregunta will be a highlight among the impressive catalog of over 80 lots including impressive collector cars and select memorabilia.
The 1998 Lamborghini Pregunta concept is both the final flourish of the marque’s pre-Audi era and one of the most radical concept cars of the 1990s. Futuristic in its proportions and engineering yet deeply evocative of Lamborghini’s wild spirit, the Pregunta previewed the design and technology that would shape the supercars of the new millennium.

Based on the Lamborghini Diablo, the Pregunta’s bodywork and interior were entrusted to French coachbuilder Carrosserie Heuliez-Torino. Sant’Agata Bolognese provided Heuliez with the engine, transmission, clutch, and chassis as a package for Heuliez to work around allowing the coachbuilder’s imagination to reach the sky for the concept car’s appearance. Styling was headed by Heuliez director Marc Deschamps, who was previously Bertone’s Director of Style and the successor to Marcello Gandini. Deschamps, whose resume includes the Renault R5 Turbo, Lamborghini Jalpa, and Citroën Camargue, successfully pushed the boundaries of both form and function.
Design
The Pregunta’s body was constructed entirely of carbon fibre, finished in Matt Dark Grey paint borrowed from the Dassault Rafale fighter jet. This connection to aviation was central to the Pregunta’s identity, reflected not only in marketing imagery that paired the car with the high-tech French fighter plane, but in the design itself: wraparound canopy glass, scissor doors mimicking a jet’s canopy greenhouse, and two removable polycarbonate roof panels that could enclose the cabin.
Inside, the fighter jet motif continued. The cockpit was divided into a focused driver’s section and a more comfortable passenger’s area, with aviation-style seats trimmed in Azure blue Alcantara with contrasting black accents. Technology was cutting-edge for the era: rear view-cameras feeding a central LCD screen in place of side mirrors, Cristine GPS navigation by BCI, DGA fiber-optic ambient lighting, and a Formula One-derived Magneti Marelli digital gauge cluster with instrument panel color matched to the seats. An Alpine stereo, Schroth four-point harnesses, and OZ wheels rounded out the specification, fusing futurism with Italian flair.
Balance
Beneath its radical Heuliez-designed exterior lay the underpinnings of a prototype Lamborghini Diablo, though extensively reworked. The chassis and running gear were retained, but the Pregunta was reconfigured to rear-wheel drive only, with radiators relocated to the front for improved balance. At its heart was Lamborghini’s proven 5.7-liter V12, producing 537 PS and 605 Nm of torque, paired to a five-speed gated manual transmission. Performance was suitably ferocious: zero to 100 km/h in 3.9 seconds, a standing kilometer in just 20 seconds, and a top speed of 333 km/h. A bespoke Quicksilver stainless steel and catalytic converter-free exhaust system gave the Pregunta a brutal, unfiltered soundtrack worthy of its jet fighter inspiration.

Originally, the Pregunta was built under Chrysler’s direction, but its subsequent and brief sale to a handful of private investment groups in the 1990s delayed the concept. The Pregunta finally debuted at the 1998 Salon de Paris, just one month after Audi AG acquired Lamborghini, and was simultaneously a bold vision of the future and a poignant swan song. It was later shown at the 1999 Geneva Motor Show before Audi permanently shelved it, alongside other design studies for the Diablo’s replacement. The Pregunta cemented itself as the final and most extreme Diablo-based concept to date, following the Acosta, Zagato Raptor, and Canto – prototypes that collectively informed the P147 project, which Audi would later complete as the Murciélago.
Exhibition
The one-off Pregunta endured however, as Lamborghini’s contract with Heuliez allowed the Italian marque to display its concept at trade shows and other promotional events until the end of 2008. The striking concept was presented one last time at Retromobile 2007 before Heuliez sold it to a private collection later that year, where it would remain for the following 18 years. The Pregunta was invited to participate in the 2008 SpaItalia Rally and drove in exhibition laps at the legendary Spa-Francorchamps circuit. It was issued an initial Polo Storico certificate in 2014, and the official classic Lamborghini restoration division inspected and serviced the car in 2021. Sporting a newly minted certification, the Pregunta was subsequently placed on display at the Automobili Lamborghini Museum – recognised by the Raging Bull as a truly special and significant milestone in the marque’s rich history.

Fresh to market after over a decade, this is an exclusive opportunity to acquire such a unique piece of Lamborghini history—one that bridged the marque’s independent past with the modern supercar renaissance it has helped cultivate. As its name implies, the 1998 Lamborghini Pregunta posed questions about the future of automotive design that only the most iconic supercars today have been able to properly answer.
Estimate is €2.500.000 – €3.500.000. Register to bid at https://www.broadarrowauctions.com/register-to-bid.
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