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Pagani has just unveiled a new Utopia dubbed "The Coyote." The hypercar has unique racing-style livery that includes fake ...
Called "The Coyote," this Pagani is supposed to look like it's been through the 24 Hours of Le Mans. It's distressed denim in ...
The V-12 powered Utopia was planned to come in an all-electric version, too, but Pagani said demand didn't exist.
The customer wanted his Pagani Utopia to look crashed and dirty, so the hypercar manufacturer complied and delivered his third Pagani model ...
A special Pagani client ordered a unique example of the Utopia inspired by endurance racing. It features a Martini-style livery and “track scars” revealing the carbon fiber body underneath. The Rosso ...
The Goodwood Festival of Speed brought spine-tingling speed as the Bugatti Bolide, McLaren Solus GT, Pagani Utopia, and Lamborghini Revuelto launched with brutal force. This highlight captures the ...
The Pagani Utopia is not your average, latest-­and-greatest, more-is-better hypercar. Oddly, for something that costs give-or-take $3 million and looks the way it does, the Utopia isn’t made to ...
Pagani starts by feeding a 94.8-pound block of metal to a five-axis milling machine that works continuously for 28 hours to make the part. That’s why the rim, the spokes, and the hub form one piece.
Like the Huayra and Zonda, the Utopia uses a Mercedes-Benz AMG V-12. In this case, it's a twin-turbo 6.0-liter engine that produces 852 hp and 811 lb-ft of torque, with a 6,700-rpm redline.
Pagani says that the Utopia Roadster is approved for worldwide road use. 130 examples will be built, all starting at $3.35 million — before local taxes, of course.
A silver Zonda and a white Huayra were joined by a dark blue Pagani Utopia which made its first public appearance on U.S. soil.
The Pagani Utopia, known for its exquisite craftsmanship and formidable twin-turbo 6.0-liter AMG V-12 engine producing 852 horsepower, is not typically subjected to such harsh conditions.