zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Culture
/
The Ghia Brezza Was Ford's Pontiac Fiero Designed By One Woman
The Ghia Brezza Was Ford's Pontiac Fiero Designed By One Woman-May 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:12:22

Image for article titled The Ghia Brezza Was Ford's Pontiac Fiero Designed By One Woman

Welcome to another installment of Cars Of Future Past, a series here at Jalopnik where we flip through the pages of history to explore long-forgotten concepts and how they had a hand in shaping the cars we know today. Last week we turned the clock back to 1991 to chat about a featherweight, rear-wheel drive two stroke-powered Toyota sport coupe called the . This time, we’re going even further back — nearly 40 years back, actually — with a Ghia-designed Ford concept that aimed to take on the Pontiac Fiero.

Meet the Ghia Brezza. After penning classics like , the Turin-based design house landed under Ford ownership in 1970, where it brought a great many concepts to life for the Blue Oval. One of those was the Brezza in 1982, which was actually based on the Ford EXP that hit showrooms the very same year.

But where the EXP was a front-engine, front-wheel drive Escort-derived coupe that in “resembled a sad frog,” the Brezza was a bit more aspirational. OK, a lot more aspirational.

Image for article titled The Ghia Brezza Was Ford's Pontiac Fiero Designed By One Woman

For one, Ghia moved the EXP’s 1.6-liter inline-four behind the driver, which explains all those vents and the flared bodywork that didn’t exist on the production car. Ford supplied Ghia with two EXPs for the Brezza’s build, both of which were hacked apart to produce this prototype. A bit of insight on that process from the July 1982 edition of Road & Track, quoting then-Ghia director Filippo Sapino, via :

We had made the AC Ghia to explore solutions to the mid-engine coupe arrangement with Ford power. But that was not a real Ford. We took two [Escort] EXPs, chopped one off at three-quarters length, just ahead of the back axle, and the other just behind the front wheels, forward of the front bulkhead. We fitted the short engine front-end unit at the back of the three-quarter length chassis pad [and] removed the engine from the three-quarter length chassis. In that way we created a driveable car, though it was not properly engineered.

The Fiero arrived a year after the EXP did, and quickly proved the be the winner in the marketplace. The Brezza was a way for Ford to flex that it could match General Motors in the mid-engine sports car game if it really wanted to, though Dearborn was reportedly never seriously considering production. It debuted at the Turin Motor Show in ’82. Shortly after, Ford condemned it to storage.

It’s a shame the Brezza didn’t enjoy a second life in production, because it’s really cool — especially from the outside. For that, we have Marilena Corvasce to thank, who led the concept’s design.

Image for article titled The Ghia Brezza Was Ford's Pontiac Fiero Designed By One Woman

Although it wasn’t well known upon the car’s unveiling, Corvasce envisioned the Brezza’s appearance in its entirety, inside and out. Some say it’s the first car “fully” designed by a woman, though there were certainly women car designers before the ’80s, and some that headed up projects, like , many decades prior.

Corvasce was hired by Ghia in 1968. Sapino once had the following to say of her determined approach to design, courtesy of , who the one-off Brezza today:

You see, when she starts a new project she takes a ream of paper and sketches out hundreds of ideas. She creates mountains of sketches that she doesn’t even show us. She continues this process until she arrives at a solution of which she is convinced.

Regardless of whether the Brezza deserves the designation of being the first car predominantly designed by a woman, it was certainly an uncommon feat in the industry. And if you ask me, Corvasce absolutely nailed it.

The Brezza’s profile is much more cohesive from front to back than the Fiero’s (sure, the Fiero was tooled for production, but the point still stands). The wedge silhouette and covered rear wheels made it look like a baby supercar, while the daytime running lights and six slats extending down the B pillar contribute real character.

Marilena Corvasce seen working on the Brezza’s design

One of my favorite cues that Corvasce lent to this car is the cut line that trails off ahead of the rear wheel cover and rises to bisect the front wheel arch. It really slims the vehicle down and accentuates those wedge proportions.

All this streamlining resulted in a drag coefficient of 0.30, which was quite slippery for the time. And the Brezza wasn’t merely pretty — it was fully functional. Between that inline-four and the rear axle was a three-speed automatic transmission. Had the car actually reached production, it may have also had the option of a manual with either four or five gears, according to a press release obtained by .

Ford entertained proposals for modest, sub-Mustang coupes for many years after the EXP and Brezza, continuing on with cars like the Probe and ZX2. But it never brought a mid-engine one to market.

1986 Ford Cobra 230 ME concept

Over the years, we’ve learned about a project internally named GN34 — also designed in part by Ghia while incorporating some components — that made it decently far in development before being shelved. While pictures of test mules are out there , the closest we got to a peek at a finished design may have been the 1986 Ford Cobra 230 ME concept. A subject for a future Cars Of Future Past, perhaps?

Unsurprisingly, no! In fact, outside of the Karmann Ghia appearing in a handful of titles, and the Ghia trim-level models of the Mondeo and Focus in Gran Turismo 2, the Turin coachbuilder’s name has been regrettably absent from racing games over the years. Unfortunately, Ghia’s years of prominence in the mid-to-late 20th century didn’t quite overlap with those of video games, or at least games that featured licensed cars. My dream of a racer that exclusively consists of long-forgotten COFP-fodder vehicles grows stronger with every passing day.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Culture
Toro y Moi -- 'Ordinary Pleasure'
Toro y Moi -- 'Ordinary Pleasure'
Traffic sucks, so why not start your morning off with some music? You provide the toast and we’ll provide the jams. You probably have to go to work today instead of hanging out at the beach, but this jam will make you feel like you’re there anyway. ...
May 25, 2026
GM Prepares to Get Dunked On at the Democratic Debates in Detroit
GM Prepares to Get Dunked On at the Democratic Debates in Detroit
The Democratic debates in Detroit promise to take on problems in the auto industry, car sales might still be plummeting, and the world is still a tough place for low-emissions and autonomous vehicles. All this and more in for Tuesday, July 30, 2019. With two Democratic debates taking place...
May 25, 2026
European Noise Regulations Are Forcing Sports Car Makers to Resort to More Fake Engine Sounds
European Noise Regulations Are Forcing Sports Car Makers to Resort to More Fake Engine Sounds
There are certain cars that you just expect to be loud. and are among them, and yet, both Alpina and AMG now have no choice but to pipe fake exhaust sounds into their cabins. And you can thank a new European noise regulation for it. “The death knell has...
May 25, 2026
Ohio's Long Battle Over Front License Plates Isn't Over Yet
Ohio's Long Battle Over Front License Plates Isn't Over Yet
Some states require front license plates, others don’t. Car enthusiasts say the cars look better without them. The police say they have captured violent criminals because of them. The state of Ohio is somehow still in the midst of this debate despite earlier this year abolishing the requirement. That...
May 25, 2026
Nearly 30,000 Volkswagen Tiguans and CCs Recalled for Faulty Airbag Modules
Nearly 30,000 Volkswagen Tiguans and CCs Recalled for Faulty Airbag Modules
Owners of model-year 2015 to 2016 and s should be aware that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has issued a recall for their cars over an airbag issue. If you’re reading this and you own a CC, then I commend you because I feel like almost nobody bought...
May 25, 2026
What Was the Last Supercar Flop?
What Was the Last Supercar Flop?
The is, in the year 2019, considered a classic of the early 1990s supercar era. It’s right up there in the Pantheon with the Ferrari F40s and the Bugatti EB110s. But when it finally went on sale in 1992, it was a total disaster. I don’t mean the car...
May 25, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved