About Auto Industry

Everyone has their eyes on the automotive industry lately. BNET Automotive gathers and supplies daily industry trends and news coverage with specific insights for managers and executives, focusing on the major auto companies and parts manufacturers. In addition to detailed auto company trends and profiles, we report on new alliances and partnerships, new models, mergers and acquisitions, labor management, auto unions, investments, and other key issues related to this sector of business.

Timesharing Supercars: Ferraris and Lamborghinis for the Day

By Jim Motavalli | Jun 19, 2009

When Aaron Fessler goes to work, he walks into a garage that is wish fulfillment for the world’s dreamers and Car and Driver subscribers. An Audi R8, polished and gleaming, sits next to an all-business Ford GT-40, which is blocking the exit of a V-12 Aston-Martin DB9, Mercedes SLR McLaren and Lamborghini LP560-4. Did I mention the British Racing Green Tesla Roadster?

Welcome to Vulcan Motor Club, a timeshare for supercars that Fessler—a serial entrepreneur—started in New Jersey circa 2007 with his friend Tom Mizzone. Sign up for a $35,000 one-year membership and you get 40 days of access to a dozen supercars. They’ll even deliver them to you, full of gas (and given their thirst, you’ll need it). This is not the only entry in the field: Club Sportiva has the same basic idea.

Here are the founders talking about the origins of their club:

 The mangled hood of Vulcan’s first GT-40 sits in the reception area as a reminder of what can happen if you get one of these beasts sideways. It was one of two cars totaled since the club was founded (the other was a Lamborghini), but that hasn’t deterred 100 people from buying memberships and then, mostly, renewing for another driving season.

Fessler says that the club, which was funded by private investors and is a for-profit venture, will break even for the first time this year, and it is expanding. It has a $2 million auto inventory, but also 100 paying customers. You do the math. A second outlet has opened in Glen Cove, Long Island and a third is planned sometime next year in the Greenwich/Stamford, Connecticut area.

“Everything’s available as a timeshare this year,” said Fessler, whose last company, Media Sentry, rode herd on Internet pirates. “You can share yachts, vacations, handbags, watches.” Handbags and watches!

The club started with Dodge Vipers and Porsche twin turbos but soon discovered that these weren’t exclusive enough. The members already owned those: They wanted the real exotics, aspirational cars they’d only dreamed about and seen in glossy magazines. “We’re in the business of making happy people even happier,” said Fessler.

Since $150,000 supercars lose $50,000 of their value the minute they’re out of the showroom, Vulcan buys most of its cars “used.” The cars they buy are, to put it mildly, lightly used—many have 100 or fewer miles on them. For many, supercars are garage queens, rolling sculpture that doesn’t need to actually hit the road.

As an attitude, that’s rather unfortunate. These cars were built to be driven hard and put away wet, which is precisely what I—as a guest of the club—did with them.

It’s interesting to note that Fessler said the recession has, in some ways, been a boon to his business. The hedge fund managers who would simply have bought a new Ferrari last year now see the wisdom of simply sharing one. “They want to preserve their capital,” Fessler said. “They also have short attention spans, and we play to that, too—if you’re bored with the Ferrari you can drive the Lamborghini or the Aston-Martin.”

Jim Motavalli photo

Jim Motavalli is the author of Forward Drive: The Race to Build Clean Cars for the Future, among other books. He has been covering the environmental side of the auto industry for more than a decade, and writes regularly on those topics for the New York Times.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Reiter Engineering Unveils Race-Prepped Lamborghini Gallardo GT3

    Edmunds - 201 days 6 hours 58 minutes ago

    Date posted: 2009-07-23 12:10:00.0 KIRCHANSCHÖRING, Germany — Reiter Engineering, Lamborghini's factory-backed FIA entry, has updated its race-bred Lamborghini LP560-4 GT3 car to 2010 FIA specifications and tested it for the first time in public. The 5.2-liter V10 now develops 570 horsepower (compared with the stock 560 hp) and 399 pound-feet...

  • 2009 New York Auto Show: 2009 World Performance Car Finalists Announced

    Edmunds - 375 days 3 hours 59 minutes ago

    Date posted: 01-30-2009 NEW YORK -- Five German cars, including two Mercedes-Benz AMG models, make up half the slate of cars vying for the 2009 World Performance Car title, it was announced on Friday. The 10 finalists for the prestigious title include the Nissan GT-R, the Audi RS6 Avant and a sole domestic model -- the Chevrolet Corvette ZR1....

  • 2009 Heffner Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 Exhaust Note – Video

    Car and Driver - 7 days 7 hours 46 minutes ago

    Blast Off! Jason Heffner makes the Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 an even faster rocket. Watch the Video: 2009 Heffner Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 Exhaust Note – Video Related posts:2009 Heffner Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 – Specialty File2009 Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 – First Drive Review2009 Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 – Short Take...

  • 2009 Heffner Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 – Specialty File

    Car and Driver - 7 days 7 hours 44 minutes ago

    Blast Off! Jason Heffner makes the Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 an even faster rocket. In the tuning world, Jason Heffner has a special talent—he can get big power gains from expensive exotic cars without messing up their reliability. Modifying a car such as the Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 is not for the faint of heart. A mistake that [...]...

  • Edo Competition Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4

    Edmunds - 56 days 4 hours 44 minutes ago

    The addition of a high-performance exhaust and a tuned ECU boosts output on the Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 to 600 horsepower and 422 pound-feet of torque

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement