For many, Château Saint Jean – the historic home of Bugatti – represents something of a pilgrimage. As well as being the one and only site of assembly for all modern Bugatti hyper sports cars, it is also the brand’s historic site and provides an inextricable link to Ettore Bugatti, who bought and renovated this Château as a place to welcome customers and introduce them to the lifestyle of Bugatti.
Today, it continues to welcome a few fortunate individuals from all over the world, and recently one very loyal Bugatti owner paid an extraordinary visit.
This long-term Bugatti customer has carefully curated a collection of rare vehicles from Molsheim, including each of the World Record Cars; Veyron 16.4 Super Sport World Record Edition, Veyron 16.4 Grand Sport Vitesse World Record Edition and Chiron Super Sport 300+1. His deep wish was to bring them home, to reunite them with the place where they came to life and the team who made it possible. A dream that came true when the three record-breaking hyper sports cars were carefully driven up to the Château Saint Jean and were joined by other rarities from The Singh Collection, Punjab, India: the Bugatti Veyron Pur Sang and the Divo.
The last world record car, the Chiron Super Sport 300+, was built to celebrate the first production series car to travel at more than 300 mph (482.80 km/h). In 2019, a variant of the 300+ travelled at 490.48 km/h at the hands of Bugatti Pilote Officiel and Le Mans 24 Hours winner, Andy Wallace, who then became the first person to drive at more than 300 mph in a production series car. Andy himself made the journey to Molsheim to meet again with the lucky owner of this collection and be a part of this historic reunion.
This dedication to achieving incomparable speeds in the modern era of Bugatti can be traced back to June 2010, almost 13 years ago. At the Ehra-Lessien test track that day, a Veyron 16.4 Super Sport – powered by a development of the W16 engine with 1,200 PS – set a record of 431.07 km/h, smashing the previous holder’s speed. The man behind the wheel that day was Pierre-Henri Raphanel, Bugatti Pilote Officiel and former racing driver, who welcomed the collector to Molsheim and shared with him the thrill of his own world record experience.
Three years after the Veyron 16.4 Super Sport set its record, Bugatti would create another benchmark, for the world’s fastest open top car with the Veyron 16.4 Grand Sport Vitesse, which travelled at 408.84 km/h with the roof down. Both would be immortalized in Bugatti history with a very limited run of cars immortalizing the world records. Such is the passion of this collector that he not only wanted to own these record-breaking hyper sports cars, but he nourished that dream of gathering them at the place they were created. A great moment and a great emotion for the whole Bugatti team.