From dusk until midnight yesterday,
the Empire State Building was bathed in red light to celebrate Ferrari’s
50th year in the United States. The honour, accorded the Prancing
Horse to celebrate the arrival of the very first Ferrari to New
York and the United States in the spring of 1954, coincided with
the New York International Auto Show gala evening. The Show itself
opens to the public on April 9th.
Ferrari President Luca di Montezemolo had this to
say to the Italian news agency ANSA: "There has always been
a great feeling between the United States and Ferrari. In 1949,
in fact, an American of Italian origin, Luigi Chinetti, was the
first man to win the Le Mans 24 hour race in a Prancing Horse car.
We have a very strong presence here now. There are over 20,000 Ferraris
on US roads and America’s passion for the marque is growing
all the time. We’ll soon be opening a large new showroom on
Park Avenue in the heart of Manhattan, too: a further demonstration
of how important our cars are to our American clients. The fact
that Ferrari’s 50 years in the US are being celebrated by
illuminating the Empire State Building with red light would have
thrilled Enzo Ferrari as much as it does me and anyone else who
is proud to be Italian.”
The theme for this year’s New York Show’s
gala evening, organised in conjunction with East Side House, a Bronx-based
New York charity, was "Gentleman Racing.” The theme was
interpreted by Ferrari and Maserati in a very evocative exhibition
of some of the most important Prancing Horse and Trident GTs ever
built.
The United States is traditionally Ferrari’s
largest market in terms of sales. In 2003, its 11th consecutive
year of growth, 1,350 Ferraris were delivered to clients, 13% more
than in 2002. This goes right against the current trend in a segment
which has slumped somewhat in the US.
Ferrari’s main markets in North America are
California, the North-East from Boston to Washington via New York
and Philadelphia, Florida, Texas, and the Mid-West with Chicago
and Detroit as the focal points.
To commemorate its 50th anniversary, Ferrari has
created a special inscription which will be applied to all the cars
destined for the US market throughout 2004. |