a rare prototype with custom coachwork from Turin
Back in 1971, visitors to the Paris Salon de l’Automobile had the chance to see a Ford Escort Monte Carlo, a unique car that looked nothing like the ones rolling off production lines. Sleeker, lower, and dressed in polished metallic paint, the Ford Escort Monte Carlo wasn’t a special edition or motorsport variant. It was a one-off designed and built by Pietro Frua, a leading Italian coachbuilder, or carrozzeria, of the midcentury.
Frua was known for coach-built Maseratis and elegant GTs, so his decision to rework a humble Ford Escort Mk1 into something entirely new felt unexpected and radical. Based on the Escort 1300 two-door, the Monte Carlo prototype kept the mechanicals but swapped out the bodywork entirely for something much more refined. The car is set to go up for auction with Bonhams on June 29th, 2025 — view the listing here.
images courtesy Bonhams, unless otherwise stated
ford escort monte carlo: the curious one-off
From a distance, the one-off Ford Escort Monte Carlo could almost pass for a scaled-down Ferrari 330 GTC. The long front hood, curved side profile, and tucked-in rear give it a gran turismo character that’s miles away from the upright, boxy Escort most people knew. Pietro Frua smoothed out the lines, removed excess detailing, and gave the car a sense of proportion that’s at once confident and compact.
Up front, the grille is minimalist and clean, the lights sit flush with the fenders, and the surfaces flow without interruption. Around back, thin tail lights and a slightly sloped rear end help the car feel balanced and considered. While it feels visually elevated, it still rides on small wheels and carries a modest 1.3-liter inline four-cylinder engine that delivers only around 70 horsepower.
There’s no clear record of why Frua took on the project. Maybe he saw potential in the Escort’s proportions, or perhaps he hoped Ford would be interested in taking it further. In any case, only one was built, and it was shown in Paris alongside Frua’s other creations, including a custom Maserati Quattroporte.
this is the only Ford Escort Monte Carlo ever built
pietro frua’s car as canvas
The Ford Escort Monte Carlo found its first home just a year later, when the wife of a Swiss architect bought the car directly from Frua. It stayed in private hands for decades, quietly passing between collectors. During the early 2000s, it was restored and repainted from its original brown to the rich red metallic it wears today.
While the Escort Monte Carlo shares its chassis and engine with a car built to be practical and affordable, Frua’s version treats it like a canvas. The transformation doesn’t rely on performance upgrades, it’s about rethinking form and presence. In that sense, it’s more of a design statement than a show car or prototype in the usual sense.
It’s still powered by the standard four-speed manual and Kent four-cylinder engine, so on paper it performs like any other Escort 1300. But this version is more about how it feels to look at, how it holds space. There’s restraint in the lines, and a real sense of purpose in how the surfaces are handled.
it was designed by Pietro Frua and shown in Paris in 1971
thin tail lights dot a slightly sloped rear end
the custom front end features flush-mounted lighting and a clean, sculpted hood
its shape borrows from Frua’s Glas GT and hints of Ferrari 330 GTC
it still runs the original 1.3-liter engine and four-speed manual transmission
the body is completely custom and doesn’t share panels with the original Escort
project info:
name: Ford Escort Monte Carlo
coachwork: Pietro Frua
auction: Bonhams | @bonhamscars
images: courtesy Bonhams, unless otherwise stated
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