This Off-Road Lamborghini Countach Concept Is the Rally Monster We Never Got

Marcello Gandini’s work on the original Lamborghini Countach was a masterclass in geometric purity and visual momentum. Its design is characterized by a single, powerful line that runs from the sharp nose to the abrupt tail, creating a sense of forward motion even at a standstill. The body is a collection of interconnected trapezoids and clean angles, forming a cohesive whole that is both brutally simple and endlessly complex. This was a car designed as a piece of kinetic sculpture, an object whose form was so powerful it became a cultural touchstone for an entire generation.

Akuseru’s redesign (dubbed CNTCH O/R) serves as a compelling case study in translating a core design philosophy to an entirely new context. The artist has lifted the vehicle to an impossible height and fitted it for off-road duty, yet the fundamental principles of Gandini’s vision are preserved. The primary longitudinal line remains the focal point, providing visual stability to the lifted chassis. The geometric window shapes and angular body panels are still present, creating a clear lineage to the original. It is a powerful demonstration of how a truly iconic design language can be adapted to speak an entirely different dialect of performance.

Designer: Akuseru

That ride height is the first real shock to the system, a complete inversion of a car that originally stood just over a meter tall. What Akuseru has done is fundamentally re-engineer the car’s relationship with the ground. The track width appears massively expanded, giving the chassis a planted, bulldog-like stance that prevents it from looking precariously top-heavy. The original LP400 was already wide for its time at 1,890 millimeters, but this concept surely pushes past the 2,000-millimeter mark, a necessity for maintaining stability with that much suspension travel. The huge, knobby all-terrain tires are tucked into muscular, squared-off fenders that feel like a logical extension of Gandini’s original hexagonal wheel arches.

The cooling solutions on display are a fantastic nod to the Countach’s history. The prominent NACA ducts behind the doors are a direct tribute, but the roof scoop is the real masterstroke. It immediately brings to mind the original LP400 “Periscopio” models, which had a small periscope-style trench in the roof for rear visibility. Here, it has been repurposed into a functional air intake, feeding the mid-mounted engine with clean air above the dust line. It is a clever, historically aware detail that shows a deep appreciation for the source material, blending a quirky design feature from the past with a genuine performance requirement for an off-road vehicle. The entire upper deck becomes a study in functional aerodynamics wrapped in that signature angular aesthetic.

Look past the aggressive rubber and you start to see the rally-raid DNA asserting itself throughout. The exposed red tow points punched through the front and rear valances are pure motorsport function, a stark contrast to the original production models that had bumpers tacked on almost as an afterthought. This is a machine built with the expectation of getting stuck and needing a pull. Akuseru’s design integrates these functional elements so they feel like part of the core aesthetic, not accessories. The entire lower section of the car seems reinforced, suggesting a full-length skid plate to protect the V12’s oil pan from whatever terrain it might be conquering.

 

The rear of the car is arguably where Akuseru takes the most creative license, and it pays off handsomely. The original’s simple trapezoidal taillights are replaced by a full-width, pixelated LED bar that spells out the Countach name. This is a thoroughly modern touch, yet it feels perfectly at home within the car’s angular framework. It gives the rear a sense of width and presence that the original sometimes lacked. Below it, the exposed exhaust system and industrial-looking rear diffuser complete the transformation from exotic supercar to brutalist off-road weapon. It is an unapologetically aggressive look that feels earned by the rest of the vehicle’s purposeful modifications.

The interior shots show those iconic scissor doors. This is both wildly impractical for off-road use and absolutely essential for maintaining that theatrical Countach character. Imagine pulling up to a desert bivouac after a long stage and throwing those doors skyward. The cabin itself appears surprisingly spacious, with what looks like modern racing seats and a cockpit designed around actual usability rather than pure drama. The tan and bronze color palette inside the copper variant creates a warm, luxurious contrast to the rugged exterior, suggesting this is a machine that can tackle the Dakar Rally in style. You can see the structural reinforcements through the open doors, beefy roll cage elements that speak to serious safety considerations beyond the visual concept.

From above, the proportions reveal themselves in full. The engine deck, massive and angular, dominates the rear third of the car with ventilation grilles that look ready to handle serious heat dissipation. Those “V12” badges flanking the rear air intakes are a nice touch, a reminder of the naturally aspirated heart that would theoretically be beating beneath all this rally armor. The wheel and tire package looks genuinely capable, the kind of setup you’d see on a serious off-road build with multi-ply sidewalls and enough meat to handle serious articulation. The fender flares are substantial without being cartoonish, maintaining the Countach’s taut muscularity while accommodating the larger rubber.

 

Akuseru’s CNTCH O/R understands the spirit of the Countach. The original was never about being the most practical, the most comfortable, or even the fastest car in a straight line. It was about shock, awe, and a refusal to compromise on its wild vision. Akuseru’s rally-spec redesign captures that same energy. In an era where even Lamborghini’s own off-road special, the Huracán Sterrato, feels somewhat restrained, this concept is a reminder of what happens when a brilliant design is pushed to its most illogical and exciting conclusion. It is a fantasy, but it is a well-engineered and deeply respectful one.

 

 

 

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