Photography by Barry Hathaway
Just when you figure you’ve seen everything, something comes
around that sets you back on your heels. Such is life in the world
of advanced technology vehicles.
This is especially so when it comes to electric cars. By most accounts
in recent years, the battery electric vehicle had died an untimely
death.
Green Car Journal editors didn’t believe it
then and we don’t now. But realistically, in the eyes of most
folks there wasn’t much going on to dispute this. That view
is turned on its ear by the Venturi Fétish, an unlikely and
curvaceous example that epitomizes what the ultimate electric supercar
should be.
The Venturi Fétish made its U.S. debut earlier this year
in Los Angeles and then followed suit in Monaco, showings that followed
an appearance in Paris. Here, it was eye-opening even by car-crazed
California standards, with a sleek body drawn by French designer
Sacha Lakic and engineering handled by Gérard Ducarouge of
Lotus Formula 1 fame. It is assembled in California, where this
elegant carbon fiber bodyshell is wrapped around a carbon aluminum
honeycomb monocoque chassis, creating a 2,424 pound sports car that’s
as aesthetically pleasing as any of the high-end exotics plying
the roads of Hollywood or Beverly Hills.

But this car isn’t all looks. A 300 horsepower, 14,000 rpm
AC Propulsion electric motor propels the rear-drive Fétish
from 0 to 60 mph in less than 5 seconds, achieving a top speed above
100 mpg. A T-shaped battery pack incorporating 770 pounds of lithium-ion
batteries provides the power, a configuration similar to that of
the nickel-metal-hydride battery design in GM’s EV1 electric
car. This 58 kilowatt-hour Li-Ion pack reportedly allows the car
a single-charge driving range of 200 miles. Regenerative braking
recaptures energy during deceleration or braking and feeds electricity
back to the batteries. Unlike most electric cars, the amount of
regeneration is driver-adjustable at the dash. The car rides on
Michelin Pilot Sport tires wrapped around aggressive 18 inch alloy
wheels up front, with Michelins over 19-inch alloys at the rear.
Inside, Venturi offers its buyers a choice of leather or neoprene
upholstery, form-fitting racing style seats, a thickly-wrapped steering
wheel, and digital instrumentation. A wide array of advanced electronics
is at a driver’s fingertips including an Apple Mini i-Pod
MP3 player and an Alpine touch-screen multimedia station, which
includes GPS navigation and DVD.
While, the Fétish is real and available, there is a catch.
This Venturi supercar is being marketed as a piece of automotive
art, limited to 25 copies and sold in L.A., Tokyo, and Monte Carlo,
the latter where Venturi Automobiles is based, for the lofty price
of $660,000. Too bad. We were looking to add one of these to our
garage, too.