Rolls-Royce Motor Cars PressClub · Article.
PRESENTING PROJECT NIGHTINGALE: A COACHBUILD COLLECTION
Tue Apr 14 13:59:00 CEST 2026 Press Release
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars presents Project Nightingale, a Coachbuild Collection. Named after Le Rossignol, French for ‘the nightingale’, and the name of the designers’ and engineers’ house near Henry Royce’s winter home on the Côte d’Azur, this extraordinary production concept is an open two-seat motor car that introduces a dramatic new expression of Rolls-Royce design.
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Georgina Cox
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
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- Rolls-Royce presents Project Nightingale, the first Coachbuild Collection
- Name derived from Le Rossignol, the name of the designers’ and engineers’ house at Henry Royce’s French Riviera estate, which means ‘the nightingale’
- Draws inspiration from high-speed experimental ‘EX’ Rolls-Royces of the 1920s
- Constructed using the Rolls-Royce Architecture of Luxury aluminium spaceframe
- Sheer, monolithic aesthetic inspired by the discipline of Streamline Moderne design
- Project Nightingale is a production concept, global testing and validation programme commencing this summer
- Available by invitation only, offered to clients with a deep affinity for Rolls-Royce design
- Limited to 100 client motor cars worldwide, with deliveries beginning from 2028
“Some of the most discerning Rolls-Royce clients in the world
asked us for our most ambitious work. We responded by bringing three
things together that have never coexisted within our brand: the
complete design freedom of coachbuilding, our powerful, near-silent
all-electric powertrain, and a uniquely potent yet serene expression
of open-top motoring – an experience that only this technology makes
possible. Achieving this required the same audacious mindset that
drove our co-founder, Sir Henry Royce, to create his radically
different experimental ‘EX’ motor cars of the 1920s. Project
Nightingale shares the spirit of those landmark projects and is the
most extravagant expression of what Rolls-Royce is capable of today.”
Chris Brownridge, Chief Executive, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
“Project Nightingale is built on the design principles that define
this marque at its most compelling – grand proportions,
absolute surface discipline, and a clarity of line that rewards the
closest attention. And yet, it takes them somewhere entirely new.
For me, this landmark motor car feels both inevitable and completely
unexpected, and it will shape everything that follows.”
Domagoj Dukec, Director of Design, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars presents Project Nightingale,
a Coachbuild Collection. Named after Le Rossignol, French for ‘the
nightingale’, and the name of the designers’ and engineers’ house near
Henry Royce’s winter home on the Côte d’Azur, this extraordinary
production concept is an open two-seat motor car that introduces a
dramatic new expression of Rolls-Royce design.
Defined by grand proportions and underpinned with a fully
electric drivetrain that delivers a uniquely silent open-top
experience, Project Nightingale draws on the glamour and confidence of
the 1920s and 1930s while remaining entirely of its time. Its creative
vision is fully resolved – the small number of design details that
remain demand entirely new manufacturing techniques that are currently
under development. Only 100 examples will be created for sale, each
coachbuilt by hand at the Home of Rolls-Royce at Goodwood.
Project Nightingale and
the
Coachbuild Collection programme have been crafted for
aesthetes – individuals for whom beauty is both observed and lived.
These clients are connected by a shared conviction in the primacy of
Rolls-Royce design, the value of the most considered motor cars in the
world, and a deep appreciation for experiences that only Rolls-Royce
can offer. Clients are already participating in a multi-year programme
of gatherings and moments curated by Rolls-Royce, immersing them in
the creative and technical formation of their motor car, as well as
private events in the world’s most desirable destinations.
STREAMLINERS, SPEED, AND THE DISCIPLINE OF SHEER, MONOLITHIC BEAUTY
Project Nightingale has been conceived for the
uniquely design-literate clients at the heart of the Coachbuild
Collection programme: people for whom a perfectly resolved surface is
as compelling as the glamour of driving an open-top Rolls-Royce. The
motor car’s aesthetic is inspired by the principles of Streamline
Moderne design from the late Art Deco era, wherein precise lines and
uninterrupted forms are more powerful than ornament. In that spirit,
when conceiving Project Nightingale, Rolls-Royce creatives embraced
sheer, monolithic volumes.
Another point of inspiration for Project Nightingale is
Rolls-Royce’s experimental motor cars of the 1920s. Known as ‘EX’
models and fitted with red badges – which Project Nightingale is also
equipped with – these are some of the rarest and most desirable motor
cars in the marque’s history. Two of these prototypes were a
particular focus: 16EX and 17EX.
These motor cars were created in 1928, at the height of the Jazz
Age, just three years after the Art Deco movement was given its name.
Henry Royce and his engineers cloaked two powerful Phantom chassis in
lightweight aluminium bodies to achieve a new top speed for
Rolls-Royce. 16EX and 17EX were designed to reach in excess of 90
miles per hour, and their torpedo-shaped form perfectly captured the
audacity of Royce’s ambition: an imposing overall scale; a long
bonnet; a shallow windscreen; and a snug, enveloping cabin with driver
and companion set deep inside.
From these foundations, Coachbuild designers distilled three
principles that directly inform Project Nightingale. ‘Upright to
flowing’: the Pantheon Grille’s commanding vertical gesture
transitioning into a long, graceful rear; ‘Central fuselage’, defined
by a single unbroken hull line running from front to rear; and ‘Flying
wings’: sculptural volumes that create tension across the overall form
and pull the eye towards the rear. Project Nightingale channels these
principles in a way that is both familiar to those fluent in the
Rolls-Royce story, yet unapologetically contemporary and unlike
anything before it.
FRONT ELEVATION
At 5.76 metres in length, Project Nightingale is
almost exactly the same length as the marque’s flagship saloon,
Phantom, yet devoted entirely to a two-seat convertible form. The
drivetrain transforms the front elevation entirely: with no
requirement for the large cooling intakes needed for an internal
combustion engine, designers achieved unprecedented expanses of
uninterrupted surfacing between the outermost edges of the wings and
the Pantheon Grille.
The grille itself is a bold interpretation of one of the most
recognisable icons in luxury. Its generous surround – almost a metre
in width – appears to be carved from a solid block of stainless steel,
with 24 vanes set deeply within it. The Spirit of Ecstasy figurine is
integrated on top of the grille in a subtly recessed section, its
lines flowing backwards and dissolving into the bonnet, as though the
figurine is moving at speed through water, and the metalwork is
parting gently around her.
Beneath the grille, a structured section widens at 45 degrees
from each lower corner before dropping down vertically, from which a
carbon fibre apron projects forward, traced by an elegant chrome belt.
This creates the effect that the grille is presented on a structural
plinth, recalling the great Art Deco skyscrapers whose uppermost
decorative floors are supported by solid geometric forms beneath them.
At the outermost edge of the wing is Project Nightingale’s most
progressive statement: slender, vertically orientated headlamp
assemblies. This treatment is emphasised with polished stainless-steel
bands that run the full length of the motor car from the bottom of the
headlamps all the way to the tail lamps.
TORPEDO ‘CENTRAL FUSELAGE’ IN PROFILE
In profile, the full impact of Project Nightingale’s
driver-oriented, torpedo-shaped design is revealed. An expansive
bonnet gives way to the dramatically raked windscreen, framed on each
side by a stainless-steel form housing a delicate quarterlight window,
inspired by the Rolls-Royce Phantom Drophead Coupé. Behind it is a
compact cabin for two, set deep within the body, before the rear deck
falls and tapers towards a dramatically low trailing edge. This is a
motor car that is almost entirely bonnet and tail, its two-seat cabin
an intimate counterpoint to the grandeur of the volumes surrounding it.
A single hull line runs continuously along Project Nightingale
from front to rear, inspired by the line that separates a yacht’s hull
from its superstructure. It begins at sculpted ‘Pinnacles’ on the
front wings – a subtle reference to heritage Rolls-Royce designs –
before flowing uninterrupted to the trailing edge. Set intentionally
high, it creates the sensation of being enveloped deep inside the
motor car. An upswept volume behind the headrests rises like a turned
collar, cosseting driver and companion against the elements,
integrating the height of the headrests into the sculpture of the
motor car itself.
Beneath, a progressive negative sculpture in the lower bodyside
deepens the impression of a central fuselage, balanced by a solid
carbon fibre sill that makes an understated historical reference to
the running boards of prominent heritage Rolls-Royce motor cars.
To add restrained decoration to the rear of the motor car, a
second lower polished stainless-steel band is introduced just behind
the centre of the rear wheels, its position and proportion recalling
the gentle white water of a sailing yacht’s wake.
Significant development has been focused on the surfacing,
ensuring that Project Nightingale appears to have been carved from a
single, solid billet. To minimise visual noise, engineers developed a
handle for the coach doors that incorporates a hidden lock mechanism
and a discreetly integrated indicator lamp. The Rolls-Royce ‘Badge of
Honour’ is also distilled into an elegant stainless-steel ‘Double R’
monogram, placed sparingly on each front wing and in the centre of the
luggage compartment.
Against this serenity, 24-inch wheels – the largest fitted to a
Rolls-Royce – strike a considered contrast. Their directional design
is inspired by the propellers of a yacht viewed from beneath the
waterline: forms that appear to be in continuous motion even when the
motor car is stationary. The surface also includes subtle, machined
stripes, creating the impression of wire wheel spokes moving at speed,
while aluminium flakes within the black finish introduce a delicate
sparkle as the wheel turns.
A TAIL OF CONSEQUENCE
Towards the rear, the surfacing swells around the rear wheel
arches, creating an impression of planted, muscular strength that
balances the overall design’s grace. The deck above is purposefully
horizontal, broken by two rear lamps of exceptional precision: these
slim clusters fall from the upper surface to the lower at an almost
perfect right angle. This striking treatment is further dramatised by
the Piano Boot, which opens sideways on a cantilever, both recalling
the ceremony of a grand piano and transforming a functional moment
into a considered act of arrival.
A single longitudinal brake lamp is placed directly at the
centreline on the rear of Project Nightingale, recalling the speed
stripes of great Streamline Moderne design. Directly below, a recessed
chrome number plate surround is set into the lower rear face with the
precision of a watch bezel: a small detail that rewards the closest attention.
Beneath, the same precision extends to the engineering. The bold
lower transom diffuser, known as the Aero Afterdeck, is enabled thanks
to the use of a fully electric drivetrain, which eliminates exhaust
pipework. This single carbon fibre piece ensures stability at high
speed without the addition of a spoiler, preserving the uninterrupted
flow of Project Nightingale’s elegant silhouette.
OPEN-AIR SERENITY, CLOSED-ROOF DRAMA
Project Nightingale becomes an exercise in serene,
open-air travel with the roof lowered. With it raised, the character
transforms entirely, creating a commanding, coupé-like presence.
Within the roof itself, a unique sound-deadening material
combines cashmere, fabric and high-performance composites. Paired with
Rolls-Royce’s fully electric drivetrain, which generates virtually no
mechanical noise, the marque’s acoustic engineers aim to achieve an
exceptionally serene experience whether the soft top roof is raised or
lowered, while still preserving the sounds that enhance the romance of
driving – such as raindrops on canvas.
The near-silent sensation of driving even early Project
Nightingale prototypes with the roof lowered is described by
Rolls-Royce designers and engineers as akin to travelling by sailing
yacht. The fully electric drivetrain generates virtually no mechanical
noise, and wind noise is all but eliminated: what remains is the world
itself – the sound of ocean waves breaking on the shore, the movement
of air through trees, the particular silence of open countryside at
speed, the chorus of birdsong.
THE INTERIOR SUITE: A WORLD FOR TWO
It was this extraordinary serenity that inspired the
centrepiece of Project Nightingale’s interior. During an early
prototype drive, Rolls-Royce designers were able to hear birdsong with
unusual clarity. Intrigued by this experience – and in tribute to the
motor car’s name – they began studying recordings of nightingales and
analysing the distinctive sound-wave patterns created by their song.
From these studies emerged an idea: to translate the rhythm of
birdsong into a visual form that could envelop those within the motor car.
The result is the Starlight Breeze suite – a flowing
constellation of ambient illumination comprising 10,500 individual
‘stars’ in three subtly varied sizes. Named after the gentle movement
of air suggested by the nightingale’s song, the pattern of light draws
directly from the soundwave forms studied by the designers. Extending
from the front of each door around the driver and companion’s seat,
the illumination wraps those within in their own celestial field,
transforming melody into light.
The Starlight Breeze illumination is carried within a sculptural
interior form called the ‘Horseshoe’, which rises behind the seats and
frames the occupants in a protective architectural gesture.
The leather of the door card is overlaid as a raised section
recalling a finely crafted saddle. This motif continues through the
centre console in a leather-covered saddle armrest – split into two
delicate pieces – which aligns precisely with the Coachline that runs
the length of the bonnet, through the cabin to the rear central brake light.
On opening the coach door, the armrest glides rearwards
automatically to reveal the Spirit of Ecstasy rotary controller. It is
operated with an exceptionally tactile stainless-steel collar formed
with four grooves reminiscent of contemporary haute joaillerie.
Within each groove, the metal is facetedand then glass-blasted,
delicately subduing the controller’s high polish. This jewelled
treatment extends throughout the interior to the gear selector and
remaining rotary controls, which are sparingly curated to just five in total.
At the touch of a button, the armrest moves further to reveal a
concealed compartment for personal items. Polished individual
aluminium cupholders – machined from billet – add a further jewel-like
accent, and a hidden shelf behind the seats incorporates space for
hand luggage: a considered and practical gesture for a motor car
conceived for long, unhurried journeys.
BESPOKE EXPRESSIONS OF PROJECT NIGHTINGALE
For Project Nightingale, Rolls-Royce is developing an
entirely new colour and material palette and set of Bespoke features,
designed and reserved exclusively for this specific Coachbuild
Collection. These will not be available on any other Rolls-Royce motor
car. Each of the 100 examples will be meticulously curated with its
commissioning client to reflect their personal taste, character and vision.
THE ‘EX’ MOTOR CAR PRESENTED TODAY
The motor car presented today reflects the creative
spirit that shaped Project Nightingale’s design story. The exterior
paint finish draws inspiration from the experimental Rolls-Royce 17EX
of 1928, though it is interpreted rather than replicated. The pale,
solid blue hue – named Côte d’Azur Blue – is infused with subtle red
flakes that reveal themselves in changing light, a discreet reference
to the red badges fitted to the ‘EX’ motor cars in period, and used
today to denote Project Nightingale’s status as a production concept.
The exterior is completed with a silver-coloured convertible soft top roof.
The interior hues evoke the atmosphere of the Côte d’Azur. The
seats are finished in soft pastel Charles Blue, paired with a warm
Grace White tone, creating an environment of gentle, sunlit calm. Deep
Navy seat inserts introduce contrast and depth, while delicate flashes
of Peony Pink appear within the fascia surround and headrests,
inspired by the wild blooms of the Riviera. The palette is resolved
with Openpore Blackwood laid in a ‘V’ shape that opens upwards,
encouraging the eye to the sky above.
ENGINEERED ELEGANCE
Project Nightingale is powered by the marque’s fully
electric drivetrain. For a Coachbuild Collection conceived for the
most discerning and design-literate clients in the world, the
qualities of electric power are deeply considered. The silent and
effortless delivery of power amplifies every characteristic that has
defined the Rolls-Royce experience for more than a century, and the
nature of this powertrain unlocks completely new design possibilities.
Further engineering details will be shared as the motor car progresses
through its global testing and development programme.
HENRY ROYCE’S LEGACY, PROJECT NIGHTINGALE’S PROMISE
Project Nightingale marks the beginning of the
Coachbuild Collection story. The individuals who inspired it represent
a growing community of passionate clients who seek Rolls-Royce design
at its most ambitious and uncompromising. In drawing on the
experimental spirit of Henry Royce and the glamour of the Art Deco
era, it is a motor car that looks to the past with the confidence of a
marque that has always known its future. As Project Nightingale
progresses through its global testing and development programme,
Rolls-Royce will share further details of the motor car, its
engineering and the extraordinary experiences that await its 100 clients.
Entry to the Coachbuild Collection programme is by invitation
only and client deliveries will commence from 2028.