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One man’s trash is another man’s treasure and this is no more true than in a scrap yard in Pruszkow, a small town located near the Polish capital of Warsaw. Around 50 artists from around the world converged on this normally quiet town to transform useless piles of rubbish into replicas of the world’s most prized supercars.
Undoubtedly the millions of pieces of scrap metal are enjoying their new second life, far more than the first time around. With intricate attention to detail, they have been crafted and molded into a rather impressive Mercedes-Benz 300 SL, a Lamborghini Aventador that conveys all the aerodynamic capability of the original, a one of its kind Maserati Gran Turismo, a fetching Fiat 500 and arguably the most rare and bespoke Bugatti Veyron on the planet. Yet, we can’t forget to mention that there is a motorbike too!
Each of these scrap metal supercars make incredible replications with striking resemblance to the original model. Not only did each of the “recycled” models possess the same size dimensions and proportions of the original, but the artists even went to the trouble of reconstructing the interior cabin as similar as possible to the luxury appointments of the archetype.
Conspicuously missing was a Ferrari, which you could easily imagine fitting right into the prestigious suite of luxury supercars. With plans for this artistic gallery to be displayed at the Dubai Auto Show in 2017, there is every hope that a California T might figure.
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