Rolls-Royce Motor Cars PressClub · Article.
MODELS OF THE MARQUE – THE 2000s: THE ROLLS-ROYCE PHANTOM VII
Mon Mar 24 14:17:00 CET 2025 Press Release
The penultimate instalment in the Models of the Marque series showcases Phantom VII, the first motor car ever to be built at our Global Centre of Luxury Manufacturing Excellence. At one minute past midnight on 1 January 2003, the keys of the first Phantom VII were handed to its new owner. The moment marked the beginning of a new era for the brand and was the culmination of a process dubbed ‘the last great adventure in automotive history’.
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Andrew Ball
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- A brief history of the Rolls-Royce Phantom VII, built between 2002 and 2017
 - The first motor car to be crafted at the Home of Rolls-Royce at Goodwood
 - Penultimate chapter in a series celebrating a landmark model from each decade of the marque’s history
 - Year-long retrospective marks the 120th anniversary of the first meeting between Henry Royce and The Hon. Charles Stewart Rolls in 1904
 
   
  “For those of us working at the Home of Rolls-Royce today, Phantom
    VII is where it all began. The first motor car ever to be built at
    our Global Centre of Luxury Manufacturing Excellence, it ushered in
    our modern era in 2003 and, in terms of design, engineering, craft
    and manufacturing, set the template for everything we’ve done since.
    Though it marked a decisive new beginning for the brand, echoes of
    earlier Rolls-Royce models are everywhere: from one angle you see
    Silver Shadow, from another Silver Cloud; and elsewhere an
    undeniable link to the coachbuilt limousines of earlier decades.
    Through these inherited traits, Phantom VII represented an
    up-to-the-minute interpretation of the traditional, formal British
    saloon. At the same time, it started completely new conversations in
    modern luxury, and the unlimited possibilities of Bespoke.”
  Andrew Ball, Head of Corporate Relations and Heritage,
    Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
    
    
At one minute past midnight on 1 January 2003, the
  Chairman & Chief Executive of Rolls-Royce Motor Cars handed the
  keys of the first Phantom VII to its new owner. The moment marked the
  beginning of a new era for the brand and was the culmination of a
  process dubbed ‘the last great adventure in automotive history’.
In 1998, BMW Group acquired the rights to manufacture Rolls-Royce
  motor cars. In less than five years, it had designed and constructed a
  new head office and manufacturing plant, and designed, tested and
  built an entirely new motor car worthy of the Rolls-Royce name – a
  timescale almost unprecedented in the industry.
  
  
  THE REBIRTH OF A LEGEND
The design for Phantom VII was initially developed in a secret
  studio, discreetly located in a former bank building on the north side
  of London’s Hyde Park. For Chief Exterior Designer, Marek Djordjevic,
  the project was a dream come true. He was instructed to begin with a
  clean sheet of paper, and was given only three stipulations: the car,
  codenamed RR01, should have very large wheels; the famous radiator
  grille; and, of course, the Spirit of Ecstasy mascot.
  
To understand the essence of what a Rolls-Royce should be, and
  the characteristics that made it so special and identifiable,
  Djordjevic turned to designs from the past for inspiration. Three in
  particular caught his eye: the classically elegant Silver Cloud; the
  contemporary, understated Silver Shadow; and above all, a coachbuilt
  Phantom II of the early 1930s.
  
The heritage Phantom provided him with classic Rolls-Royce
  signature elements that would profoundly inform the new model’s
  design: a roofline just over twice the height of the wheels; a long
  wheelbase, with the front wheels well to the fore and a minimal front
  overhang; a long bonnet, visually linked to the passenger cabin by an
  accent line of brightwork; and an imaginary line drawn rising from
  rear to front along the lower edge of the body, reminiscent of a motor
  yacht at speed – the famous ‘waft line’ still exhibited by every
  Rolls-Royce model today.
  
  
  THE EPITOME OF COMFORT
Phantom VII was designed first and foremost around the comfort of its
  occupants – an overarching design approach known as the Authority
  Concept. The driving position provided a commanding view of the road
  ahead, with the primary controls intuitively positioned, in groups and
  shapes to make them operable by touch alone so the driver could keep
  their eyes on the road. Secondary controls were either concealed in
  compartments, such as the centre armrests, or operated by the
  Controller. A solid metal cylindrical dial, exposed by opening part of
  the front-seat armrest, the Controller took care of functions
  including communication, navigation, entertainment and the motor car’s
  setting configuration, all displayed on a rotating central fascia screen.
  
For rear-seat passengers, the Authority Concept manifested
  itself in wide, rear-hinged coach doors allowing them to enter and
  exit the cabin easily and decorously. Once inside, the doors closed
  with the touch of a button. The seats themselves were offered in a
  choice of configurations: ‘Individual’ with a fixed centre armrest and
  console; or ‘Theatre’ with a raisable armrest and angled side-bolsters
  permitting occupants to sit at a slight angle towards one another to
  aid conversation. The seats were also slightly higher than the front
  seats, so the passengers could see through the windscreen more easily
  – and admire the Spirit of Ecstasy proudly crowning the long sweep of
  the bonnet ahead.
  
  
  WHERE PAST AND PRESENT MEET
While Phantom VII’s overall silhouette reflected traditional
  Rolls-Royce proportions, and its interior upheld the marque’s
  reputation for peerless comfort, its engineering and construction were
  at the leading edge of 21st Century technology.
  
Of all the engineering innovations introduced by Phantom VII,
  the most enduringly important was its construction method. Instead of
  the usual monocoque structure, in which the bodywork and frame are
  integrated into a single shell, Phantom VII was built on an aluminium
  spaceframe – a skeletal framework of some 200 extruded sections to
  which the suspension, engine and body panels are attached. This method
  is often used in racing and high-performance vehicles, owing to its
  superior strength-to-weight ratio. The Rolls-Royce version was also
  designed around the marque’s requirement for hand-built perfection;
  when measured from bumper to bumper, the length of every motor car
  built on it would be accurate to within 0.5mm. Achieving this
  precision required skilled craftspeople to hand-weld 150 metres of
  seams in 2,000 separate locations. The Phantom VII spaceframe provided
  the foundations for the contemporary Architecture of Luxury, which
  underpins every model built at the Home of Rolls-Royce today.
  
  
  EXTENDING ITS INFLUENCE
The Architecture of Luxury harnesses another key benefit of the spaceframe. Infinitely scalable and modifiable, it gives Rolls-Royce engineers and designers the freedom to create motor cars of different shapes and dimensions on the same underpinnings. Today, that remarkable flexibility is demonstrated in models as diverse as Spectre and Cullinan; but the original Phantom VII spaceframe provided the first example of this adaptability.
At the 2004 Geneva Motor Show, Rolls-Royce unveiled an experimental car, 100EX. Four inches shorter than Phantom VII, it was a two-door drophead coupe, with a V16 cylinder engine and a fabric hood concealed by marine-style bleached teak decking, inspired by the classic J-Class racing yacht of the 1930s. It was so well received that a production version, with a V12 engine, was approved; Phantom Drophead Coupé, as it was known, is now one of the rarest and most desirable motor cars of the entire Goodwood era.
The following year, Rolls-Royce launched Phantom VII Extended Wheelbase (EWB), in which the chassis was lengthened by 250mm (9.8in) to create additional space in the rear cabin.
In 2006, another experimental Phantom, 101EX, appeared at Geneva.
  This was a fixed-head coupé based on the Drophead, and was the first
  to feature the Starlight Headliner now seen on almost every
  Rolls-Royce motor car. The Phantom Coupé also became a series
  production car, again in extremely limited numbers.
  
  
  A NEW POWER RISING
Another link to the past was provided by the engine. Rolls-Royce had used a V12 engine with Phantom III in 1936, and again in Silver Seraph in the late 1990s. That Phantom VII should be similarly equipped was obvious and indisputable.
Rolls-Royce’s engineers were aware that the Phantom VII engine
  required a significant amount of power to deliver the effortless
  ‘waftability’ they wanted from their new model. Phantom VII was
  therefore fitted with a brand-new, specially designed engine with a
  capacity of 6.75 litres – the traditional displacement for a
  Rolls-Royce motor car engine. A derivative of this engine is still
  used in Rolls-Royce motor cars today – with the obvious exception of
  the all-electric Spectre and Black Badge Spectre.
  
  
    
THE ULTIMATE CANVAS FOR BESPOKE
Phantom has long been revered as the ultimate canvas for Bespoke,
  enabling clients to create truly singular expressions of their vision.
  Among the most notable Private Commissions and Collections were
  Phantom Aviator, which paid homage to the golden age of flight with
  aviation-inspired details and a cockpit-like interior; Phantom
  Serenity, a masterpiece of handwoven silk and delicate embroidery that
  redefined luxury craftsmanship; and the Art Deco Collection, which
  celebrated the bold geometric forms and opulent materials of the
  Roaring Twenties, translating the era’s glamour into a contemporary
  Rolls-Royce aesthetic. Each of these creations exemplified the
  boundless possibilities of Bespoke, reinforcing Phantom’s status as
  the pinnacle of individualisation.
  
  
    
A CRUCIAL LEGACY
Phantom VII remained in production until 2017, when it was replaced by the current eighth generation. For 14 years, it was the marque’s pinnacle product and re-established, then reinforced Rolls-Royce’s long-cherished reputation as ‘the best car in the world’. As the first – and until the launch of Ghost in 2009, the only – motor car to be handmade at Goodwood, it was the foundation on which all Rolls-Royce’s subsequent growth and success was built.