Skip advert
Advertisement

Road to Type R – evo meets owners at Honda HQ

evo and Honda UK host a meeting for Type R owners - and bring every generation of Civic Type R together

Type R. The name treads a line somewhere between the exotic and the accessible – a slice of motorsport pedigree that just happens to inhabit humble hatchbacks, coupes and saloons.

Recent generations of the Civic in particular, and the success they achieved, have made it more accessible still, and it’s now possible to find Type R Hondas – once rare and often import-only – at highly tempting prices in the classifieds.

Advertisement - Article continues below

That affordability allowed for a healthy turnout to the recent Type R event hosted by evo and Honda at the firm’s UK headquarters in Bracknell. Over fifty cars turned up, with various generations of Civic, and the occasional Integra in attendance – plus a range of pristine heritage fleet vehicles, two of which evo itself had arrived in.

Type R heritage fleet

We’re not ashamed to admit that it’s a non-Type R model that first caught our attention at Honda HQ, albeit a car that first heralded the Type R brand in 1992.

Honda’s early NSX, an automatic model resplendent in red paintwork, looks incredibly dainty alongside the hefty, bewinged form of the latest Civic R. A 1989, 3.0-litre model, it was driven by none other than Ayrton Senna when the Brazilian was on media duties in the UK. It’s an immaculate example, and while the four-speed auto will be a huge turnoff for some, it’s hard not to fall for in the metal.

Type R started with the NSX Type R in 1992, which shaved 120kg from the standard car’s 1350kg kerb weight by binning soundproofing, air conditioning, electric windows and audio equipment.

That ethos would continue with subsequent Type Rs, including the Integra in 1995 and the EK9-generation Civic in 1997. That car was followed by the EP3 Civic Type R in 2001, as well as the FN2 that debuted in 2007.

The NSX Type R was revised in 2002, while two generations of Accord have also worn the badge – though European Accord Type R (tested in evo 012) was subtly different from their Japanese counterparts which, confusingly, carried ‘Euro R’ badges.

Lined up alongside the NSX and new Civic R are a late-model S2000 – a model never graced with a Type R variant – and the belligerent Mugen Civic Type R. It’s the new car though that attracted the most attention from existing owners.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Honda Civic Type R (FN2) – the car world's greatest misses
Honda Civic Type R FN2
Features

Honda Civic Type R (FN2) – the car world's greatest misses

Its lineage contains some hot hatch greats, but the late-noughties Civic wasn’t one of them
26 Mar 2025
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Best cars of the 1980s – performance icons from the decade of excess
Best '80s cars
Best cars

Best cars of the 1980s – performance icons from the decade of excess

The performance car as we’ve come to adore it has its origins in the 1980s. Family cars got fast, fast cars got faster, all of them were huge fun
19 Aug 2025
Mercedes-Benz EQS 2025 review – electric S-class takes aim at the BMW i7
Mercedes EQS – front
In-depth reviews

Mercedes-Benz EQS 2025 review – electric S-class takes aim at the BMW i7

Mercedes put all of its resources into creating a bespoke all-electric flagship, but it’s not quite worthy of replacing the S-class yet
18 Aug 2025
Gordon Murray has built two new supercars, and one of them looks just like a McLaren F1
GMSV S1 LM and Le Mans GTR
News

Gordon Murray has built two new supercars, and one of them looks just like a McLaren F1

Gordon Murray has announced the Le Mans GTR and S1 LM – a pair of track-oriented spin-off supercars from a new Special Vehicles division
15 Aug 2025