Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Innocenti

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Industry
  
Automotive

Headquarters
  
Milan, Italy

Founded
  
1947

Parent organizations
  
De Tomaso, FCA Italy

Products
  
Automobiles

Founder
  
Ferdinando Innocenti

Defunct
  
1997

Innocenti httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen11bInn

Fate
  
Scooter sector (independent company) in 1971, car production 1993, using marque 1996

Key people
  
Ferdinando Innocenti, founder

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Innocenti was an Italian machinery works originally established by Ferdinando Innocenti in 1920. Over the years they produced Lambretta scooters as well as a range of automobiles, mainly of British Leyland origins. The brand was retired in 1996, six years after a takeover by Fiat.

Contents

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History

After World War II, the company was famous for many years for Lambretta scooters models such as LI125, LI150, TV175, TV200, SX125, SX150, SX200, GP125, GP150 and GP200.

From 1961 to 1976 Innocenti built under licence the BMC (later the British Leyland Motor Corporation, or BLMC for short) Mini, with 848, 998 cc and 1,275 cc engines, followed by other models, including the Regent (Allegro), with engines up to 1,485 cc. The company of this era is commonly called Leyland Innocenti. The Innocenti Spyder (1961–70) was a rebodied version of the Austin-Healey MKII Sprite (styling by Ghia). The car was produced by OSI, near Milan. In 1972 BLMC took over control of the company.

In 1972 the company's land, buildings and equipment were purchased by British Leyland in a deal involving approximately £3 million. The British company had high hopes for its newly acquired subsidiary at a time when, they reported to the UK press, Italian Innocenti sales were second only to those of Fiat, and ahead of Volkswagen and Renault: there was talk of further increasing annual production from 56,452 in 1971 to 100,000. However, the peak production under BLMC was 62,834 in 1972, in spite of exports increasing from one (1) car in 1971 to more than 17,000 in 1974. Demonstrating their ambitions, the British company installed as Managing Director one of their youngest UK based senior executives, the then 32-year-old former Financial Controller Geoffrey Robinson. Three years later BLMC ran out of money and was nationalised by the UK government.

In February 1976, the company passed to Alejandro de Tomaso and was reorganised by the De Tomaso Group under the name Nuova Innocenti. Benelli had a share and British Leyland retained five percent, with De Tomaso owning forty-four percent with the aid of a rescue plan from GEPI (an Italian public agency intended to provide investment for troubled corporations). Management was entirely De Tomaso's responsibility, however, and later in 1976 GEPI and De Tomaso combined their 95% of Innocenti (and all of Maserati) into one new holding company.

However, with the loss of the original Mini, the Austin I5, and the (admittedly slow-selling) Regent, sales were in freefall. Production was nearly halved in 1975 and was down to about a fifth of the 1974 levels in 1976. After this crisis, however, the new Bertone-bodied Mini began selling more strongly and production climbed to a steady 40,000 per annum by the end of the '70s. The first model had Bertone-designed five-seater bodywork and was available with Leyland's 998 cc and 1275 cc engines.

Exports, which had been carried out mainly by British Leyland's local concessionaires, began drying up in the early eighties as BL did not want to see internal competition from the Innocenti Mini. Sales to France (Innocenti's biggest export market) ended in 1980, with German sales coming to a halt in 1982. Around the same time, the engine deal with Leyland ended, and production soon dropped into the low twenty thousands. Later models, from model year 1983 on, used 993 cc three-cylinder engines made by Daihatsu of Japan. De Tomaso developed a turbocharged version of this engine for Daihatsu which found use in both Innocenti and Daihatsu cars.

In addition to building their own cars, De Tomaso also had Innocenti use their factory capacity in producing bodywork for and providing final assembly of the Maserati Biturbo, Quattroporte, and the Chrysler TC by Maserati. As production kept decreasing, and prices vis-à-vis competing Fiat products increased, Innocenti attempted to stay relevant by adding ever higher and more individual equipment. Innocenti kept building their own cars until early 1993. Beginning in 1990, when Fiat took over, Innocenti also sold Yugo's Koral and Brazilian-sourced versions of the Fiat Uno (Elba station wagon and Uno Mille) in the Italian market. The marque ended when sales of these rebadged models came to a halt in 1996.

List of Innocenti vehicles

  • 1945–1971 Lambretta (motorscooter)
  • 1960–1967 A40/A40S Berlina/Combinata – hatchback Austin A40 Farina
  • 1961–1968 950/1100 Spider – roadster based on Austin-Healey Sprite with original body designed by Ghia
  • 1963–1974 IM3/IM3S/Austin I4/I5 – rebadged sedan BMC ADO16 (Austin/Morris 1100)
  • 1963 Innocenti 186 GT – prototype of a coupé with a 1.8-litre Ferrari V6 engine
  • 1965–1975 Mini – rebadged sedans and station wagons BMC ADO15 (Mini)
  • 1966–1968 Innocenti C – a coupe, based on the Austin-Healey Sprite and powered by a 1098cc 4 cylinder engine. 795 examples were built.
  • 1973–1976 Regent – sedan Austin Allegro
  • 1974–1982 Innocenti Mini 90L and 120L – Bertone rebodied Mini
  • 1976–1987 Innocenti Mini de Tomaso – sport version of Innocenti Mini developed by de Tomaso, initially equipped with BLMC 1275 engine, since 1982 with 1.0-litre 3-cylinder turbocharged Daihatsu engine
  • 1982–1992 3-Cilindri/Minitre/650/500 – further development of Innocenti Mini with Daihatsu 3-cylinder and 2-cylinder engines
  • 1986–1992 Mini 990 – longer version of Innocenti Mini with 1.0-litre 3-cylinder Daihatsu engine
  • 1991–1993 Koral – Yugo Koral rebadged for the Italian market
  • 1991–1996 Innocenti Elba – Re-badged version of the Brazilian Fiat Elba, which was based on the Fiat Uno.
  • 1994–1997 Mille – Brazilian Fiat Uno for Italian market (not to be confused with the "Mini Mille" version manufactured between 1980–1982)
  • References

    Innocenti Wikipedia