Skip advert
Advertisement

Aston Martin DB11 review – design

The DB11 has aged remarkably well, and shares its overall proportions with the newer, more aggressive DB12

Evo rating
RRP
from £147,900
  • Lovely chassis balance; effortless performance; sumptuous materials
  • Not as rounded and competent as rivals; build quality lacking

Along with the many Aston Martin firsts introduced by the DB11, it was also the car that debuted a reformed design language under the leadership of Marek Reichman. That language has now been spread across the whole range and continues with the DB12; albeit with a bolder, meaner flavour.

The front end is defined by the typical Aston Martin grille, flanked by all-LED headlights and a huge clamshell bonnet. From here back, the bodywork then contorts and tapers towards the swollen rear arches, terminating in a flat rear end that eschews the typical boot flick seen in other Astons, leaving an elegant pebble-shaped rump.

Reichman also visually split the body from the roof section, offering ‘roof strakes’ as Aston calls them, in a contrasting carbon or black finish. Combined with the small tail lights, the DB11 is more colour sensitive than its more svelte predecessors due to the imbalance of mass top to bottom, but get it right and there are fewer more dramatic cars.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The DB11 Volante is perhaps the most successful example of the DB11’s design, though, with that controversial roof removed in favour of the compact folding soft-top. Without the visual weight above, the DB11’s aggressive hips have some room to breathe, while the redesigned rear deck gives the overall design more structure through the use of deep profiling that frames the cabin. It all looks very resolved, and when paired with Aston’s flamboyant interior finishes is every bit as glamorous as one would expect of a drop-top Aston Martin.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Porsche 911 Carrera S 2025 review – a 473bhp BMW M4 CS fighter
Porsche 911 Carrera S – pictures
Reviews

Porsche 911 Carrera S 2025 review – a 473bhp BMW M4 CS fighter

A new Carrera S has arrived with supercar-baiting pace and a £120k starting price – is it the sweet spot of the 992.2 range?
25 Apr 2025
Aston Martin Vantage (1993 - 2000) review – Britain's 550bhp hand-built muscle car
Aston Martin Vantage V550 – front
Reviews

Aston Martin Vantage (1993 - 2000) review – Britain's 550bhp hand-built muscle car

One of Aston Martin's last true hand-built models, the ludicrous twin-supercharged Vantage was a muscle car crossed with a stately home
24 Apr 2025
Used Ford Mustang (S550, 2015 - 2023) review – Ford’s V8 muscle car for £20k
Ford Mustang (S550) front
In-depth reviews

Used Ford Mustang (S550, 2015 - 2023) review – Ford’s V8 muscle car for £20k

The S550 appeared ten years ago as a more sophisticated kind of Mustang, in right-hand drive and with the job of tempting European sports car buyers. …
23 Apr 2025