Savonuzzi and His Spectacular SVA

Turin-based producer SVA made waves in 1949-โ€™50 with a miniature racing car that many consider the most beautiful ever conceived. Astonishingly, its designer Giovanni Savonuzzi was motivated by an order from America for a midget racer.

 Giovanni Savonuzzi at the Turin Polytechnic
Bearer of a degree in Industrial Engineering at the Turin Polytechnic, Savonuzzi honed his skill on Fiat aero engines during World War 2 and later at Cisitalia.

In Italy, a country thatโ€™s home to numerous small, specialized companies making exotic sports and racing cars, few can compete with SVA in their combination of obscurity with exotic engineering. Turinโ€™s SVA flourished briefly at the end of the 1940s and produced at maximum two cars and a few more chassis. Yet the dazzling design of one of them, a single-seater, well-deserved its presentation by leading publications around the world.

SVA can best be viewed as a spiritual offshoot of Turinโ€™s Cisitalia. That company, brainchild of industrialist and passionate car enthusiast Piero Dusio, created a sensation with its thrusting initiatives at a time when Italyโ€™s major carmakers were struggling to recover from the privations of the wartime years. With its 1,100-cc single-seaters and sports cars Cisitalia was a shining star, attracting the best drivers of the day including Germanyโ€™s Hans Stuck and the unforgettable Tazio Nuvolari.

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