Skip advert
Advertisement

The Morgan Midsummer is a six-cylinder Pininfarina barchetta, with teak

British sports car maker joins forces with Italian design house for a limited-run coachbuilt special

Morgan has collaborated with Italian coachbuilder Pininfarina to create the Midsummer, a limited-run barchetta based on the British marque’s latest CX-generation platform. Combining over two centuries of coachbuilding expertise, it features entirely bespoke bodywork and interior elements to make it one of the most exclusive Morgan models produced to date. Pricing hasn’t been disclosed, but with just 50 to be produced, we can’t imagine it’ll come cheap.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Based on the same bonded aluminium architecture as the latest Plus Six, the Midsummer comes equipped with that car’s BMW-derived 3-litre turbocharged six-cylinder and eight-speed ZF automatic transmission. Output and performance figures haven’t been revealed, but expect it to at least match the Plus Six with 335bhp, 369lb ft of torque and a 4.2sec 0-62mph time.

> Morgan Plus Four receives chassis and design tweaks for 2024

Performance isn’t the focus here though, but rather the striking coachbuilt body. While its design remains typically Morgan, exaggerated proportions, the removal of the windscreen and aero-informed surfacing reference Pininfarina designs of the 1930s and ’40s. The bodywork is entirely hand-formed from aluminium, with 250 hours of work going into every example. 

Spanning its length is a stainless steel sill courtesy of Pininfarina, highly polished to allow it to reflect the light of its surroundings. The headlights are Morgan’s latest units, now with silver inserts, and the tail lights are incorporated into the extended rear within subtle chamfered light pods. The most notable design element, though, is the inclusion of exposed teak on the exterior, seamlessly combining over 400 individual layers of the hardwood (each up to just 0.6mm thick) to form a striking structure that surrounds the cabin and acts as a distinctive shoulder line.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

Design aside, the Midsummer also receives adjustable Nitron dampers, tuned and manufactured specifically for the model. It gets its own set of 19-inch wheels too, now forged to bring weight from 13kg a corner to just 10, helping to contribute to Morgan’s 1000kg dry weight target. Also new for the Midsummer is an increased tyre profile, with its Michelin Pilot Sport 5 tyre designed to reflect the aesthetic of models of old – this is something that will trickle down to the rest of the range in time. 

The teak theme continues in the cockpit, with even its dashboard using 126 layers of wood for its creation. The overall interior design is familiar, but Morgan has made an effort to set it apart from the firm’s regular models with a forged aluminium centre to the steering wheel and handmade, off-white analogue dials, the incorporation of which required a re-evaluation of the car’s electrics.

The Morgan Midsummer will make its public debut at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in July, but if you’d like to get your hands on one, it’s already too late – all 50 examples had already been accounted for before its reveal. The first examples will enter production in Q3 2024.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Morgan Supersport revealed – Malvern wants you to swap in your Porsche Cayman
2025 Morgan Supersport – front
News

Morgan Supersport revealed – Malvern wants you to swap in your Porsche Cayman

Morgan got carried away in the process of replacing the Plus Six and ended up with a new flagship. Morgan’s next decade starts here, with the Superspo…
11 Mar 2025
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Why the wild V8-powered Land Rover Defender D7X-R has ‘flight mode’
Land Rover Defender Dakar D7X-R
News

Why the wild V8-powered Land Rover Defender D7X-R has ‘flight mode’

The Land Rover Defender will take on the world’s most gruelling off-road race in 2026. Here’s our first look at the car that will do it
25 Nov 2025
How a sub-200bhp runabout exposes the problem with today’s performance cars
695C Turismo
Opinion

How a sub-200bhp runabout exposes the problem with today’s performance cars

A shortage of long-term test cars flags up a wider problem, says Meaden
27 Nov 2025
Everyone loves the idea of a GT car, so why does nobody buy them?
Aston Martin Vanquish
Opinion

Everyone loves the idea of a GT car, so why does nobody buy them?

We all love a great GT, says Jethro. Trouble is, no-one wants to buy them
21 Nov 2025