One of Britain’s Greatest Sports Cars Ever Just Got an Overhaul That We Didn’t Know It Needed

The Jaguar XJ220 just got an epic rehash from an epic designer.

Rear side view of a yellow sports car with a large rear spoiler and black aerodynamic wheel covers.Callum Designs

There are some cars in the world that are simply so legendary and so grand, they absolutely do not deserve to be altered in any way. The Jaguar XJ220 is one of them.

But one famous individual thought otherwise and decided to do the unthinkable. That individual happens to be Mr. Ian Callum. The famed auto designer who also happened to be a major force behind some of Jaguar’s most recent and lavish-looking automobiles.

And he just gave his modern rehash of this ’90s legend.

Reimagining the British icon

Yellow futuristic sports car with sleek aerodynamic design and black tinted windows on a textured surface.
Look familiar? That’s because it is as underneath is an OG Jaguar XJ220.
Callum Designs

After Callum left his nearly two decade-long career at Jaguar-Land Rover in 2019, giving us the likes of the second-generation XK coupe and convertible, the last XJ sedan, the F-Type, F-Pace, and I-Pace, he went out on his own to establish Callum Designs.

This new GT1 is the latest result. Born out of his effort to pay tribute to the iconic supercar, Callum reworked the XJ220’s sheetmetal to reimagine what it would look like today.

Callum then complemented the model with new, monoblock-style wheels, inspired by the original XJ220’s dish-like alloys. While both the front and rear fascias gain more distinctive and sleeker treatments, all shaped with aerodynamics in mind.

“Finished in vivid yellow, the GT1 celebrates the spirit of the great GT cars of the past while exploring what that idea could become today,” Callum said in a statement.

It all looks very modern and well-balanced, leveraging both the XJ220’s original and signature silhouette with a little bit of a hat-tip to some nostalgic ’90s design elements. Such as the multi-element wide-span taillights.

If you were hoping for a production model, however, you might be out of luck. Callum did say that it was more of a design study. But he also hinted that if someone were to donate their personal XJ220 to make a GT1, he would most certainly get to work.

Jaguar’s last-ever production supercar

Silver Jaguar XJ220 sports car parked indoors against a white brick wall.
Many regard the Jaguar XJ220 as one of the greatest supercars not just from the ’90s, but of all time.
Jaguar

Heralded as one of the automotive GOATs of the ’90s, the XJ220 was an era-defining supercar. The Xj220 came to life out of Jaguar’s then-thriving motorsports efforts in partnership with TVR. And it was all to remind the world of the Coventry-based automaker’s rich and storied racing and motorsports heritage.

It was especially important to Jaguar, who, at the time, suffered major casualties from its decades-long mismanagement by the late British Leyland. To show that it still knew how to make fast, breathtaking cars, Jaguar came up with the XJ220. It was part of Jaguar’s and TVR’s ambitions to compete in the world-renowned 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Silver Jaguar XJ220 sports car parked on brick pavement with Sydney Opera House and water in the background.
The XJ220 was Jaguar’s last-ever production supercar.
Jaguar

After an overwhelmingly positive response at its conceptual debut during the 1988 British International Motor Show, Jaguar put the XJ220 into production. At which point, the company received close to 300 deposits, amounting to roughly £50,000 each at the time.

With just 282 units produced between 1992 and 1994, the XJ220 simply went down as one of the greatest cars ever made by Jaguar.

Yellow sports car front with sleek headlights and large black grille on a textured floor.
Do you think Ian Callum did the XJ220 justice? Or should it have been left alone?

Since then, Jaguar has yet to follow up with a successor. The brand tried to with the C-X75 Concept from 2010, which coincidentally, Callum also designed himself.

But due to the Great Recession incurred by the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, Jaguar cancelled the production version. And thus, the XJ220 and its legacy was left to rest in the pages of history.

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