Richard Mattei (#17, 1957 Lotus Seven) enters turn 1 during Friday morning's practice session.

โ€œSimplify, then add Lightness.โ€ Whether fully attributed to Colin Chapman, or simply the lore that surrounds his engineering genius and design prowess, this philosophy is certainly embodied in the cars that have made Lotus a legendary performance company for more than half a century. And nowhere else is this more evident than in the ground-breaking Lotus 7.

Conceived as a low-priced road car suitable for racing and hillclimbs, the Lotus 7 first arrived, in 1957, as the Series 1. Although Lotus ceased production of the Lotus 7 in 1972 after numerous iterations and improvements, the basic car lives on today via tributes, replicas and outright knock-offs. Still considered one of the most iconic cars of the post-war era, the simple and clean design of the Lotus 7 remains an impressive design statement despite running against some of the most beautifully streamlined cars of the same era.

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