Background
Although better known as a bicycle manufacturer, Bianchi actually has a long history of manufacturing cars, first joining forces with Fiat and Pirelli shortly after the end of World War 2 to produce the Fiat 500-based Bianchina at its factory near Milan. With its air-cooled, two-cylinder 500cc engine and humble roots, it would be easy to dismiss the Bianchina as bargain-basement transport for folk for whom a bigger car remained a distant dream.
Bianchi had other ideas; Luigi Rapi, the Fiat designer, gave the car swooping lines and lashings of chrome, a move that ensured the public viewed the Bianchina as being more upmarket than the car upon which it was based, just as Bianchi had intended. A two-door landaulet followed in 1957, closely followed by a proper cabriolet - and a three-door estate.
The latter was given the name Panoramica. It’s three-door profile and inch-perfect lines raised it far above the more typical estate car of the period, cars for which utility had always been more important than style. The Panoramica changed all that, proving once-and-for-all that estate cars could be desirable in their own right. If you’ve ever lusted after a wagon, then the chances are you’ve got Autobianchi to thank for its existence.







