Automakers once treated the future like a playground, sketching chrome dreams that looked ready to lift off rather than roll out. Between the 1950s and 80s, design studios smelled of motor oil, hot ...
The cars of the 1950s were more than transportation; they were rolling sculptures that turned postwar optimism into chrome, color, and curves. Even now, when I look at a modern crossover or an ...
Jack's passion for cars started when Fernando Alonso won his first Formula 1 championship behind the wheel of the blue and yellow R25. Ever since, his enthusiasm for the automotive industry has ...
For fans of East Coast racing history, the second weekend of July has been the best time to come to the hills of central Pennsylvania, as the combined York Nostalgia show and accompanying York US30 ...
As part of MotorTrend ’s 75th anniversary, we're looking back at some of history’s most significant cars. A complete list would fill a book, so for each decade we've selected five notable cars that ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Last week, a surprising cluster of 1950s European cars occupied some prime parking spots on Lexington Avenue and 75th Street in ...
“Engine in rear? Tricycle wheels? Polaroid Plastic top? Atomic power? Just as at home in the water or in the air as on the highway?” This car of the future was designed and illustrated by ...
Following World War II, population patterns in the United States shifted in two primary ways: a move away from older cities in the Midwest and toward newer urban centers in the South; and a mass ...