The announcement of Project Nightingale by Rolls-Royce has an almost dramatic quality. No social media teaser marketing. No billboard with a price tag on it. A car that very few people will ever see in person, much less drive, is quietly revealed.
One hundred pieces. constructed by hand. subsequently delivered to a target audience chosen by the business. It sounds like humor until you realize that the purchasers are actual people who have actually made inquiries.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Model Name | Project Nightingale |
| Manufacturer | Rolls-Royce Motor Cars (owned by BMW Group) |
| Headquarters | Goodwood, West Sussex, United Kingdom |
| Vehicle Type | Two-seat electric convertible, coachbuilt |
| Production Run | 100 units, hand-built |
| Length | 5.76 metres (similar to Phantom) |
| Wheel Size | 24-inch (largest ever fitted to a Rolls-Royce) |
| Powertrain | Fully electric, near-silent operation |
| Design Inspiration | 1920s EX experimental models, Art Deco era |
| Estimated Price | Between £500,000 and £20 million per unit |
| Chief Executive | Chris Brownridge |
| Director of Design | Domagoj Dukec |
| First Deliveries | Expected 2028 |
| Client Access | Invitation-only |
The vehicle itself is stunning in a way that seems purposefully antiquated. The 5.76-meter torpedo-shaped two-seater was inspired by the EX aircraft that the business tested in the 1920s, back when Sir Henry Royce was still working in the workshop. The proportions are enormous. It’s a huge grille. The wheels are the biggest the brand has ever installed, measuring 24 inches across. However, the entire system is powered by an electronic drivetrain, which Rolls-Royce claims makes “virtually no mechanical noise.” It’s an odd combination: a vehicle driven by a technology that wasn’t around when the original drawings were created, pulling visual elements from a time of brass and steam.
Chief Executive Chris Brownridge describes it like a curator would a one-time commission. According to him, the world’s most discriminating clients requested the most ambitious work, and the result of those discussions was something the brand had never done before.

He claims that only this technology can create an open-top driving experience, an all-electric drivetrain, and coachbuilding freedom. He might be correct. It’s also likely that a lot of effort is being made by the language to disguise what is really a luxury item for those who already possess everything.
It becomes interesting to watch this play out against the larger automotive backdrop. Rolls-Royce suddenly withdrew their 2030 all-electric commitment just last month, stating that gasoline-powered vehicles will still be used beyond that. The majority of automakers are struggling with lower-than-anticipated EV demand, unclear tariffs, and customers who consistently put off upgrades. However, at Goodwood, none of it seems to matter. Project Nightingale’s 100 purchasers aren’t shopping. They are commissioning. Additionally, the economy in which they operate, where a single car might cost anywhere from half a million to twenty million pounds, hardly registers the same concerns.
The drawings give the impression that Rolls-Royce is no longer actually selling automobiles. For a buyer who wants the car to feel like a private space, features like the horseshoe-shaped cabin, the self-retracting armrest, the concealed shelf for hand luggage below the seats, and the nearly minimalist stainless steel control dial are all important. The kind of space where you enter, take a seat, and forget about the outside world right away.
The design director, Domagoj Dukec, described the vehicle as “both inevitable and completely unexpected.” It’s a strange term, yet it makes sense. It was inevitable as Rolls-Royce was always going to take a similar action. Unexpected because there isn’t really a market for a $10 million electric convertible given the current state of the world economy, politics, or ecology. And yet here it is, with a hundred buyers in line.
It’s difficult to ignore the disparity. The remainder of the vehicle industry is still debating middle-class affordability, battery pricing, and infrastructure for charging. One hundred Art Deco ghosts are being produced by Rolls-Royce and shipped to customers who, by 2028, most likely won’t remember placing the order.
