Historic British brand Alvis, founded in 1919 and at one point the employer of Alec Issigonis, the designer of the original Mini, is back building beauties as part of a continuation series of cars.
Continuation series cars are a big thing nowadays. Jaguar, Bentley, and Shelby have been offering such vehicles for years now and they seem quite popular too, despite the expensive price tags. Alvis, ...
The majority of new cars are boring. They have to be. Emission laws stifle exhaust notes, often resulting in muffled, muted murmurs of what could be. Advancements in technology, while impressive, make ...
‘The Alvis name is known mostly only to car nerds. People under 50 may have heard of it but won’t know much about it,’ concedes Alan Stote, the current custodian of the Alvis name and the man behind ...
Alvis, the century-old British automaker frequently upstaged by Bentley until its demise in 1968, has been doing something that few other companies have attempted: building new examples of its classic ...
Alvis, the British manufacturer of sports cars from 1919 to the late 1960s, is coming back to build a limited run of continuation cars. The company went bust in 1968, but was revived in 2012 as the ...
Bearded people – you might remember that a few years ago, Alvis (the old British carmaker operational between 1919 and the late Sixtes) was effectively revived. Now called The Alvis Car Company, in ...
Alvis, the classic British sports car manufacturer, has expanded its range of Continuation Series cars to six models and two chassis configurations. The company, which had been defunct for fifty years ...
In its 1938 road test of the new Alvis 4.3-litre Sports Tourer, The Autocar concluded: "There are cars, good cars and super cars. When a machine can be put into the last of these three categories, ...
Alvis hasn't been in business since 1967, but there seem to be Alvises everywhere. If you grew up in Coventry, England, where the company produced rides for the upper middle class for 40 years, and ...
Bearded people – you might remember that a few years ago, Alvis (the old British carmaker operational between 1919 and the late Sixtes) was effectively revived. Now called The Alvis Car Company, in ...