Reinventing The Wheel

With EVs poised to write a new chapter in automotive history, Robb Report thought this a smart moment to go back to the drawing board. Here, some of the world’s top design visionaries brainstorm the sleekest, cleverest, and in some cases, kookiest rides of the future.

By Robb Report Staff 18/05/2026

As the world shifts toward sustainable transportation, the future of electric-vehicle design is on the cusp of a transformation. EV sales may be stagnating of late, but thanks to advancements in battery technology, autonomous driving, and eco-conscious materials, the cars of tomorrow could look and perform in ways we can only begin to imagine. Which is what we decided to do.

Robb Report challenged some of the most exciting names across a spectrum of creative fields—watches, jewellery, fashion, architecture, furniture, yachts, music and even cars—to dream up original EVs that push beyond today’s production models.

Unchained from the need to house a massive internal combustion engine—and, in some cases, a human driver—they responded with wildly inventive renderings, which fill the following pages. From sleek supercars that look like they should be driven by movie villains to whimsical contraptions that lean more toward Pixar animation, the designs in this portfolio are sure to rev up petrolheads.

And who knows? They could be coming to a road near you in the not-so-distant future.

PROJECT NAME: ’27X Speed

WHO: J. David Weiss, president and founder of Designova Creative + Associates Innovation Consultancy

BRIEF: “My ’27X Speed concept is born from an intersection of inspirations: my nearly 20 years of working in the fascinating world of yacht design and the DNA I have developed in crafting vessels of scale and presence, but also the more recent time I have spent developing the nascent EV marine sector, building hydrofoils, ultra E-Skis, super e-powerboats, and more.

“The last piece that helped bring this concept to life is my passion for all things automotive design. This exercise unlocked my archive of automotive inspiration that’s been building for decades, and as I considered what might spark a fresh recipe for this ‘EVolution’ of car design, I recalled a 1927 Duesenberg Model X Speedster in a lovely marine blue with apropos boattail styling that I fell in love with years ago. I utilised some of the iconic ’20s proportions while enjoying what I love about designing electric transportation: freedom of shape, detail and proportion.

“In this renaissance of new vehicular possibilities, I recalled an era when transport was truly celebrated and the joy of movement was central: an avant-garde teardrop three-wheel, with a dash of surfing style on top as a nod to my marine design roots.”

PROJECT NAME: Flux

WHO: Margit Argus, architect and founder, and Mariia Korolova, interior designer, Studio Argus

BRIEF: “The needs for cars in today’s changing society are different from those of the past. With increasing urbanisation and growing demands for flexibility, car requirements have become highly varied. Even within a single family, the need for a car can differ from day to day. For example, when commuting in the city, only one or two people may be in the car at a time, making large, heavy vehicles unnecessary. These cars take up space, create noise, and, in most cases, only transport a single passenger.

“Our proposal [above] is to create a modular electric car that can be easily adjusted by adding or removing modules. A two-seater car could be expanded into a four-seater when needed, and additional modules such as a luggage compartment could be added as well. One module is designed for two people sitting one behind the other, making the car very narrow. If necessary, a second module can be attached, allowing four people to travel together.

“The idea of a modular car is inspired by modular or transformable furniture—why not bring the same concept into the automotive industry?”

PROJECT NAME: Callum Grampain

WHO: Ian Callum, design director at Callum, an automotive and product design company

BRIEF: “The flexibility of package and profile compared to internal-combustion-engine cars is one aspect of EVs that we appreciate as a design team. The opportunity to move the cabin forward to where the engine used to be simply gives more internal space, allowing a one-box vehicle without a hood. We believe this ‘cab forward’ profile will become more prolific as a result of this opportunity.

“A recreational vehicle such as this [below] can take full advantage, maximising the interior package over a given wheelbase.

“Our proposal has EV power and all-wheel drive, giving more than adequate torque to each wheel—another benefit of an electrical vehicle, thus enabling excellent off-road capability. This van has a lifting roof, giving additional space to stand and added functional feature.

“We believe this combination of EV package and capability is ideal for such a fun recreational vehicle.”

PROJECT NAME: Autokinó

WHO: Martin Frei, cofounder and chief designer of watch brand Urwerk

BRIEF: “The Autokinó is not just a car—it is a statement of independence, a redefinition of mobility and a vision of sustainable technology in action. It is a vehicle that not only moves itself but also reshapes the world around it.

“By embracing self-sustaining energy, radical design and the thrill of driving, the Autokinó is the real automobile—the one that has been missing all along.”

“For over a century, automobiles have relied on external energy sources. The Autokinó (Greek for ‘self-moving’) redefines mobility as a self-sufficient vehicle, generating its own power.

“Using thermoelectric technology (Seebeck & Peltier effects), it absorbs ambient heat, converting it into electricity while cooling the environment—a revolutionary response to climate change. Its nano-structured thermovoltaic panels ensure full energy independence, eliminating the need for charging stations.

“Inspired by the Mars Rover, the Autokinó’s four-wheel electric propulsion allows it to traverse any terrain. Its fighter-jet-inspired cockpit integrates sci-fi aesthetics with advanced interfaces, placing the driver in control. Unlike autonomous vehicles, it upholds individual freedom, ensuring an engaged driving experience.”

“With its futuristic design and self-sustaining power, the Autokinó is more than a car—it is a technological statement, shaping the future of mobility.”

PROJECT NAME: Wishbone

WHO: Tej Chauhan, industrial designer

BRIEF: “I’m frequently asked what I’d like to design next. I’ve always been a petrolhead. I love anything with wheels—from classic Porsches and Ducatis to shopping trolleys. I’m pretty handy around a karting track, and any grocery store. My graduate thesis, in 1995, was a ‘personal public transport system’—electric scooters you could hire for short-distance travel around a city centre. But since then, I haven’t designed another vehicle.”

“I’m interested in the future of short-distance personal transport in towns and cities. I like the idea of a vehicle which delivers the feeling of fun but is also practical in the everyday sense. I’ve sketched a concept called Wishbone.”

“It’s a compact, personal electric transport—pedal-powered, combined with sophisticated, high-powered electric drive. By pedaling, and with the pilot’s own midship seating position, they would feel part of the propulsion system itself. I imagine that would feel quite exhilarating. It’s also modular, allowing quick reconfiguration to switch between carrying an extra passenger or extra shopping bags. Wishbone combines fun, speed, practicality and exercise. Carve it around Topanga Canyon, or take it to collect the groceries.”

PROJECT NAME: Aerotech 2025

WHO: Ed Welburn, former vice president of global design for General Motors

BRIEF: “It is my belief that the future will see electric vehicles built in significant volume, with creative designs that will appeal to customers at all price points. I would like to focus on a new and exciting world of electric vehicles that will appeal to the most discerning customers. Welcome to the return of bespoke coachbuilt vehicles.”

“Instead of focusing on any one design, I would rather focus on a much larger system of bespoke automobiles. It is my view that the electric vehicle of the future will be made of two distinct components: the running chassis, which will house all of the electrical components, including batteries, electrical motors and systems; and the second major component will be the body, including the full interior. These vehicles will be assembled in high volume, but some running electric chassis will be shipped to coachbuilders who will create and build low-volume or bespoke automobile bodies.”

“These vehicles will include everything from exotic hypercars to sleek coupes, grand sedans and unique crossovers. All of these bespoke vehicles will use the same advanced electric running chassis, tuned for their customer’s unique desires.”

PROJECT NAME: The Vollebak Rover

WHO: Nick and Steve Tidball, founders of Vollebak, a sportswear and adventure-clothing brand

BRIEF: “We once ran an ultra-marathon across the Namib Desert. To get into the desert, a large group of us were driven there in a decommissioned military vehicle. The guy driving, who was ex-military, said, ‘Right… up on the roof, hold on to whatever you can!’ We then drove across the desert into the African sunset while holding on to barely anything. It was a wild experience. The vehicle held another 15 people inside.”

“We want that sense of adventure in the Vollebak Rover. Just trying to get inside it should be an adventure.”

“We think electric vehicles will begin to evolve, to take on different wild and extreme parts of our world as we learn from our off-world experiences on Mars, Titan and the Moon—and our Rover reflects this.”

“Our Rover will be made from space-age aluminium alloys, with its four giant wheels on rocker-bogie suspension. The vehicle would seat 15—or 25, if safety is less of a concern for you.”

PROJECT NAME: Heavy Metal or Chrome-O’zone

WHO: Alison Mosshart, artist and singer-songwriter

BRIEF: “My feelings on EV cars is the ugliness of their ‘more modern, more better’ design. If I were to design my dream EV, it would be big and beautiful and hark back to the ’60s and ’70s, before cars were made of trash plastic and cheap tricks. I’d want mine made of steel, decorated and dazzling with chrome and craftsmanship, designed by hand, built by people, comfy, lush handcrafted leather seats, an utter lack of digitisation inside, no screen, please.”

“Real dials, a real dashboard, all the bells and whistles hurtling into the red, a back seat you could actually take a nap on, real buttons, heavy metal, thick hunking glass. Did I mention chrome? Serious hubcaps, works of art. Weight. I want the car to have tremendous weight! To move smoothly over potholes and curbs, to crash like a ’70s Cadillac and drive away practically unscathed… the hood emblem catching bugs, wobbling a bit, the rearview mirror a real mirror, not this distorted fun-house crap.”

“I love old cars. Most people love old cars. Because they were works of art. Cherished, polished on the weekends, driven with pride, conversation starters. If EVs are the way of the future, fine, good, but can’t they look desirable? Can’t they look regal? Can’t they feel real? Can’t we build them to last? Let’s go back to heavy metal, chrome, and leather and rediscover the art form of the car itself. We should be converting these old masterpieces, reimagining the unbelievable stock we still have, retro-fitting the old-school with new modern hearts.”

“We should be celebrating our rich car history, paying homage to our finest work, that was and still is, endlessly inspiring and beautiful to behold.”

PROJECT NAME: Renovatio

WHO: Tara Bernerd, founder of design firm Tara Bernerd & Partners

BRIEF: “When asked to look at designing an EV of the future, I relished the challenge despite the fact that designing a car would be a first for me. Therefore, my initial instinct was probably very personal. I have always been a ‘Jeep girl’—one of my first cars was the Renegade Golden Eagle Jeep—and with that in mind, I set to the task.”

“The first thoughts were to consider shape, form and materiality, and, of course, diving deeper into the way the dashboard and equipment might work. From there I took inspirations from the epic story and film Dune, and at that point a Jeep that could drive the sandy terrains of this futuristic world started to evolve. Anish Kapoor inspired me for the exterior bodywork, and the glamorous bucket seats of a restomod Porsche by Singer were also inspiration.”

“My first design looked more like a futuristic toy, and my aim was to carve a shape that might work within a city or off-roading. I arrived at my vision of a Jeep EV for the future, retaining the joy of open-air driving. The bodywork is suggested in stainless steel, with a mirrored finish, complete with substantial wheels and exposed springs. Texture comes within, and tonality turns to a tan caramel leather with a black-lacquered racing-seat frame.”

“Having completed my mission, I have a lot to learn on the dynamics of designing and building a car, but I had a lot of fun trying!”

PROJECT NAME: Aerion SG

WHO: Dwyer Kilcollin, cofounder of jewellery house Spinelli Kilcollin

BRIEF: “Sci-fi is my favourite indicator of the world to come. The world we live in today is a brilliant confi rmation of the excellent work of the great authors of the past century.

“Yet, with all of the great works of literature, the one thing that I think about every single time I’m stuck in traffic is Inspector Gadget. The little helicopter blades that come out of his hat? Where is this functionality? I have been waiting to fly above the traffic to cut the line for nearly 40 years!

“The hovercraft I’m envisioning [left] would not replace cars, but it would add versatility and, importantly, dimension to the traffic grid. To this end, my vehicle is equipped with four drone turbines that fold out from the front and rear of the vehicle, allowing the car to lift off at a moment’s notice.

“Now, about the front versus the rear of a vehicle: I’m not sure there is a need for the distinction. The car will drive itself, so it seems unimportant to face any particular direction, since none of us will be watching where we are going. Low, sweeping windows allow small children equal opportunity to see the sights, while a roof pane auto-dims depending on the passengers’ preference.”

PROJECT NAME: Tide

WHO: Rob Armstrong, creative director of ThirtyC Yacht Design

BRIEF: “Introducing the 30C concept EV car [left], fusion of luxury and functionality. Designed with a focus on spaciousness, it offers a large interior volume, maximising comfort and versatility.

The seating layout is fully adjustable, allowing the cabin to transform for different uses—whether for a relaxed lounge-like setting, a workspace, or a more conventional driving arrangement. Its sleek body is defined by expansive glass surfaces, creating a sense of openness while flooding the cabin with natural light.

“The extensive use of glass enhances visibility while blurring the boundaries between the interior and exterior, making every journey feel seamless and connected to the surroundings. The roof is equipped with a cutting-edge foldout solar array, designed to reduce the car’s reliance on charging stations and extend range.”

PROJECT NAME: Autonomous Taxi

WHO: Mathieu Lehanneur, furniture and lighting designer

BRIEF: “An autonomous taxi? Sure. A driverless taxi? So what? It’s a paradox, but perhaps out of conservatism, innovation often mirrors what came before it. Nothing looks more like a gas-powered car than an electric one, and today’s developing domestic robots aren’t so different from the mechanical automatons of two centuries ago.

“If autonomous taxis are coming, I want the experience to match the technological feat [right]. I want to feel protected but still see the city. I want the freedom to hop on and off as I please. I want to feel like I’m aboard a vessel gliding across the city’s surface, imagining myself as its skipper.”

PROJECT NAME: Karisma

WHO: Karim Rashid, industrial designer

BRIEF: “The car captures the essence of sensual minimalism (a term I coined as a movement that is less, but more humanised) and the idea that the digital age was designed to make our world more sustainable through simplicity. By embracing this philosophy, Karisma becomes more than just a car—it symbolises a vision for the future, where technology meets elegance and efficiency without excess.

“The car reflects how design is evolving in response to the needs of a changing world—focusing on sustainability, elegance and purposeful simplicity. It’s not just about reducing material things but also about amplifying the experience of driving and living with intention and grace. It’s a statement piece that embodies the future of sustainable accessibility in every curve and detail.

“I would like the design to include digital elements, like advanced interactive interfaces and seamless integration with smart devices, to further highlight that connection between the digital revolution and sustainability. Each triangular panel is replaceable and produced with structural glass-reinforced polymers. The joinery of each panel would have a lightweight steel bar like a series of roll bars around the entire chassis. Here is the EV car ready for the road tomorrow. Not so sci-fi—a democratic, inexpensive vehicle for mass-market. I am an advocate of democratic design: designocracy.”

This article appears in the Autumn issue 2026 of Robb Report Australia New-Zealand. Click here to subscribe.

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Omega Just Unveiled 9 Watches in Its New Constellation Observatory Collection

The line-up shows up a bevy of metals and colours, too, as well as two new calibres.

By Nicole Hoey 31/03/2026

Omega’s latest watch is in a universe of its own.

The Swiss watchmaker just unveiled its new Constellation Observatory Collection today, the next step in its Constellation lineage and the first two-hand hour and minute timepieces to ever earn Master Chronometer certification. And if you were paying attention to any of the dazzling watches spotted at the Oscars this year, you would’ve caught a glimpse of the new line already: Sinners star Delroy Lindo rocked one of the models on the Academy Awards red carpet, giving us a pre-release preview of the collection.

Developed at Omega’s new Laboratoire de Précision (its chronometer testing lab open to all brands), the collection houses a set of nine 39.4 mm watches. The watches underwent 25 days of scrutiny there, analysed via a new acoustic testing method that recorded every sound emitted from the timepiece to track irregularities, temperature sensitivities, and more in the name of all things precision. (Details such as water resistance and power reserve are also thoroughly examined.) This meticulous process is all in the name of snagging that Master Chronometer label, meaning that the timepiece is highly accurate and surpasses the threshold for ultra-high performance. The Constellation Observatory Collection has now changed the game, though, thanks to its lack of a seconds hand.

A watch from the Constellation Observatory Collection, with the Observatory dome on display. Omega

“Until now, precision certification has required a seconds hand,” Raynald Aeschlimann, president and CEO of OMEGA, said in a press statement. “The development of a new acoustic testing methodology has made that requirement obsolete. It is this breakthrough that has enabled us to present the Constellation Observatory, the first two-hand watch to achieve Master Chronometer certification.”

In addition to notching its place in history, the collection also debuted a new pair of movements: the Calibre 8915 and the Calibre 8914, each perched on a skeletonised rotor base. The former’s Grand Luxe iteration will appear on the 950 Platinum-Gold model in the collection, which offers up that base in 18-karat Sedna Gold alongside a Constellation medallion in 18-karat white gold with an Observatory dome done in white opal enamel surrounded by stars. The second Calibre 8915, the Luxe, will find its home on the other precious-metal models in the line, either made with the brand’s 18-karat Sedna, Moonshine, or Canopus gold seen across the case, the hand-guilloché dial, and, of course, the movement itself. (Lindo chose to rock the Moonshine Gold on Moonshine Gold iteration, priced at approximately $86,000, for Sinners‘s big night at the Oscars.) As for the Calibre 8914, it can be found in the collection’s four steel models.

 

Omega Constellation Observatory Collection
A look at a gold case-back from the collection. Omega

Each model is a callback to myriad design features on past Omega models. That two-hand dial, for one, comes from the 1948 Centenary (the brand’s first chronometer-certified automatic wristwatch), while the pie-pan dial (seen in various blue, green, and golden hues throughout the line) and that Constellation medallion caseback both appear on watches from 1952. The star adorning the space above 6 o’clock also harks back to 1950s timepieces from Omega. And to finish off the look, you can opt for alligator straps in a variety of colours, or perhaps a gold iteration to match the precious-metal models; the brick-like pattern on the 18-karat Moonshine bracelet was also inspired by Omega watches from the ’50s.

We’ll have to keep our eyes peeled for any other Constellation Observatory timepieces (or any other unreleased models from the brand) at the rest of the star-studded events headed our way this year—perhaps the Met Gala?

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In Search of White Gold

Colorado’s barely known San Juan Mountains do a fine line in bespoke skiing experiences, luring alpine-sports cognoscenti and billionaire thrill-seekers alike.

By Craig Tansley 18/05/2026

“Though no one currently on staff is at liberty to say, billionaire actor Tom Cruise is a very average heli-snowboarder. But although no one currently on staff is at liberty to say, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos—the world’s second richest human—makes up for Cruise’s inability with his off-piste prowess. The pair have been clients of Telluride Helitrax, a heli-skiing outfit operating in the backcountry behind Telluride Mountain Resort, in remote south-west Colorado, since 1982. My source, a former guide who prefers to remain anonymous, admits he’s entertained a host of household-name One Percenters over the years.”

“Power billionaires aren’t going to the popular resorts any more,” he reveals over a happy-hour drink at a Telluride bar. “Luxury skiing these days, it’s all about exclusivity. No one with any clout shares snow, and at every resort, no matter how fancy, you have to share the slopes. But nowhere is more exclusive than the backcountry. That’s your billionaire’s playground. And no backcountry is more exclusive than San Juan backcountry.”

Conditions match those found in Alaska, according to those in-the know.

Which is precisely why I am here. Australia’s considerable brigade of free-spending, snow-crazed executives may jet off to Vail and Aspen each northern winter for thrills, but it turns out some of the world’s most choicest ski experiences have been right under their noses—only a short helicopter ride, car journey or private jet flight from said resorts.

Packed into the ultra-rugged southern end of the Rocky Mountains, the San Juans are a little chunk of the Swiss Alps in the US—young, ridiculously spectacular formations known for their steep slopes, deep powder snow and Disney-esque triangular peaks, all bathed in 300-plus days of sunshine a year. And the region is augmented by unique, and select, backcountry options that rival anything currently in the upscale ski orbit.

Carving clouds in Silverton backcountry terrain.

Case in point: North America’s highest skiing setting, Silverton Mountain. Located in the heart of the San Juans, outside the tiny town of Silverton, the 4,111 m peak boasts 736 hectares of chair-accessible terrain set among what is reputedly the deepest, steepest snow in the nation. It also offers a further 10,000 hectares of private terrain, serviced by heli-ski operation Heli Adventures. This is the Shangri-La of skiing: every slope connoisseur has heard of it, though most wonder if it actually exists.

We arrive via the treacherous Million Dollar Highway, where a disturbing lack of guard rails sometimes causes travellers to plummet into the valley floor (the death toll, grimly, averages eight people per year). Silverton Mountain was bought in 2023 by Heli Adventures’ young co-founders Andy Culp and Brock Strasbourger. While private punters can book the hill in its entirety, starting from around $14,000 per day, plus extra for single heli-skiing runs, the destination is also open to the public from Thursdays to Saturdays through winter.

“Silverton is a bastion for the pure ski experience,” Culp says. “All that corporate consolidation that happened when ski resorts all over the world developed condos and real estate and got super-busy… well, it never happened here. You’re able to access Alaska-like terrain from an old rickety chairlift, but you’re an hour’s drive from a pretty major airport [Montrose]. And you can access snow that’s even better than most heli-skiing straight off your lift.”

There’s no radio-frequency lift passes when I arrive. In fact, I don’t get a lift pass at all. A discarded school bus doubles as the “second chairlift”; it picks me up and returns me to a yurt which serves as a restaurant and bar. “There’s a time and a place to hang out at The Little Nell [Aspen’s legendary après-ski bar] and the world doesn’t need more of that,” Culp says. “This is the new luxury. We also run a heli-ski business out of Aspen [Aspen Heli-Skiing] but this is where we come. You can’t put a price tag on what we have here.”

I drive away from the mountain, back along the perilous Million Dollar Highway, park my car and disappear into the San Juan National Forest with guide Kaylee Walden. This white-coated outback between Silverton and Ouray, dubbed “the Switzerland of America”, offers swathes of primo backcountry skiing terrain. The ski touring here is often likened to Europe’s iconic Haute Route—an emblematic trail between Mont Blanc and the Matterhorn.

The operator Mountain Trip offers a Colorado version of that feted circuit, on a multi-day traverse between secluded huts. All in all, there’s nearly 8,000 km² of national forest and 2,500 hectares of wilderness to explore, frequented only by the occasional intrepid enthusiast.

A wood-burning sauna is being prepared as I arrive at Thelma Hut, 4,500 m above sea level. Traditionally, US Forest Service huts were humble affairs, with rudimentary bunks, self-service kitchens, and food supplies brought in by skiers. This evening, however, a chef is preparing local bison across from an open fireplace as the sun sets through a floor-to-ceiling window against a horizon of white mountains. As he works, I walk out into the snow to study the twilight sky; beaming planets shine down on me, necklaces of tiny stars sparkle.

Thelma Hut, in the San Juan National Forest.

Back down to earth, upon my return to “civilisation”, we take a two-hour car ride to Telluride, probing through the San Juans. The small town is picture-postcard pretty, wedged at the end of a box canyon surrounded by Colorado’s tallest waterfalls, and hosts the highest concentration of 4,000-m-plus peaks in the state. Most of its buildings are on the National Register of Historic Places, including a bank that was robbed in 1889 by the outlaw Butch Cassidy.

While the locale offers everything from luxurious on-mountain dining options to 7-km-long runs, it’s the heli-ski enterprise that’s lured me. Telluride Helitrax holds sole rights to over 500 km² of completely deserted ski terrain, a few minutes’ flying time from town. The company runs a range of Eurocopters which guests can charter into Colorado’s best alpine basins, cirques and couloirs. “The range mightn’t be as expansive as Alaska,” says Telluride Helitrax program director Joseph Shults. “But the views, the terrain, the snow depth and quality is as good.”

I’m staying in a privately owned three-bedroom penthouse apartment, where a helicopter takes off each morning for convenience (when I’m done carving clouds, I move a kilometre up the mountain to the seven-bedroom, three-storey mountain retreat Hood Park Haven, valued at around $42 million). Telluride Helitrax uses an abundance of drop-off locations, all above the tree line, meaning everyone from intermediates to experts can be catered for.

Telluride Helitrax offers a multitude of drop-off points.
The $42 million Hood Park Haven retreat.

During my three-day odyssey, I don’t cross a single other ski track, but it’s the peace that is most startling. In this pocket of montane paradise, there is, literally, not a single sound—a stark contrast to the whirling fury of the chopper that transports me. My experienced guide Bill Allen won’t reveal who’s come before Robb Report. “You’d know their names,” he says, grinning.

And so the San Juans remain a secret to all but a fortunate few. Of all the luxuries the ultra-wealthy enjoy in the skiing ecosphere, the promise of untouched snow is by far the most enviable. Here in Colorado is where the white gold truly lies.

Photography: Kane Scheidegger (heli-skiing); Patrick Coulie (hut); Courtesy of Colorado Tourism Office (Hood Park Haven).

This article appears in the Autumn issue 2026 of Robb Report Australia New-Zealand. Click here to subscribe.

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Best Combustion Supercar: Ferrari 12Cilindri Spider

A modern classic in the making, combining naturally aspirated power with elegant restraint to deliver performance that feels as refined as it is visceral.

By Vince Jackson 20/04/2026

In a year when carmakers of all persuasions sheepishly extended hyperbolic electric targets, it’s fitting that the monastic puritans of Maranello—who, lest we forget, won’t finally yield to the sin of battery power until October with the Elettrica—opted to make combustion their major power play.

As an uncertain future of AI omnipresence barrels towards us, the 12Cilindri—an analogue, open-topped tribute to Ferrari’s late-’60s/early-’70s grand tourer, the Daytona—represents a defiant fade into the past, a pause for breath, a fleeting return to The Good Times when nascent technology provoked excitement rather than existential dread.

Guiding this automotive nostalgia trip is, as the nomenclature suggests, a naturally aspirated 6.5-litre V12 engine, generating an unceasing wave of power as it sears towards the 9,500 rpm redline with relative nonchalance. That’s because the 12Cilindri is not a mouth-foaming attack-dog. It scales performance heights with the refinement of the finest Italian works of art; its “Bumpy Road” mode facilitates comfy al fresco GT cruising, and even the imperious powerplant is mannerly at most speeds.

For all the yesteryear romance, progressive technologies and engineering, such as a world-class 8-speed transmission, advanced electronic aids and independent four-wheel steering, are baked into the deal. The 12Cilindri’s clean, stark design somehow toggles between retro and modern; and while vaguely polarising, one can’t ignore its magnetic road presence.

In terms of aesthetics, Ferrari describes the 12Cilindri as being “ready for space”; in many ways, a fantasy vehicle that transports users to another dimension is probably what the world needs right now.

The Numbers

Engine: 6.5-litre V12

Power: 610kW

Torque: 678 Nm

Transmission: 8-speed dual-clutch auto

0-100 km/h: 2.95 seconds

Top speed: 340 km/h

Price: From $886,800

Photography by SONDR.
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High and Low

At Le Bernardin, Aldo Sohm oversees one of the most formidable cellars in fine dining. But on the beach, he’ll happily drink a cheap rosé. The world-class sommelier explains why taste—and humility—matter more than price.

By Tori Latham 12/05/2026

Aldo Sohm is one of the most accomplished sommeliers in the world. The 54-year-old Austrian heads up an oenophile’s empire on New York City’s West 51st Street, where he both serves as wine director at Michelin three-star Le Bernardin and leads his namesake wine bar, just across the road from the fine-dining institution. (He spends his time literally running back and forth between the two.) So it may come as a surprise that this man, who sips prized varietals all day, admits to the joys of a glass of Whispering Angel, a ubiquitous rosé that retails at stateside Target stores for US$22.99 (around $30) a bottle.

The context here is important; the aptly named Sohm is quick to clarify that he’s not about to start serving Whispering Angel as one of the pairings with chef Eric Ripert’s US$530 (around $750) eight-course tasting menu. But during a trip to the Caribbean for the Cayman Cookout food festival, Sohm’s wife requested a glass of rosé on the beach. When he went to fetch it, she specified that she wanted a cheap drop, not the fancy stuff that he likely would have grabbed. “I felt kind of gobsmacked, right?”

Sohm says as we’re sitting in the tasting room at Aldo Sohm Wine Bar. “Now, rather than just criticising, I have to admit: I got out of the water, and I tried Whispering Angel, too. It was delicious.”

Aldo Sohm Wine Bar, across the street from Le Bernardin in midtown Manhattan.

Unlikely as it may be, this humility is perhaps the key to Sohm’s success. His lack of self-seriousness makes him an anomaly in the oftentimes highfalutin world of fine wine. Rather than shaming you for your preferences, Sohm will indulge your desires. Maybe, as in the case of his wife, you’re going to be right. More likely than not, you’re going to be wrong. He won’t simply tell you that, though; he’ll use his encyclopedic knowledge of wine to subtly steer you in the right direction, allowing you to come to that conclusion on your own. “You just wake up from your dream—and mistake—and realise that, ‘Oh yeah, he’s right,’” says Ripert, who has worked with Sohm for almost two decades.

Sohm intended to move to New York for only 18 months. Growing up in Innsbruck, in the Austrian Alps, he wanted to be a helicopter pilot. Like many childhood fantasies, that didn’t come to fruition, and he settled on something more practical, becoming a teacher at a hospitality school. Having overcorrected—“That was way too boring for me,” he admits—he switched to the more public-facing side of the industry, getting a job as a restaurant server. It was then, when he was about 21, that Sohm fell in love with wine. (Prior to that, he was a self-proclaimed Bacardi and coke guy.)

The menu’s croque monsieur

After studying wine on his own time, he began his formal sommelier education in 1998. He rose quickly through the ranks and was named the best sommelier in Austria in 2002, a title he defended the following two years and reclaimed in 2006. Amid that stretch, he sojourned to New York in 2004 with the goal of improving his English to compete in international competitions. It paid off: four years later, he won the top prize from the World Sommelier Association. But more than the accolades, Sohm had discovered a career. By then, he had joined Le Bernardin after stints at Wallsé, Café Sabarsky and Blaue Gans—all Austrian restaurants in Manhattan.

“Back then we had a very strong French sommelier community, and they controlled everything,” he says. “And it was an uproar because how come an Austrian sommelier came to one of the most French restaurants?” He proved his bona fides, and in 2013 Ripert and Maguy Le Coze, the co-owners of Le Bernardin, approached him with the idea of partnering with them in a wine bar. It was Ripert who suggested putting the connoisseur’s name on it.

Aldo Sohm Wine Bar debuted the following year, with a team that Sohm handpicked. Sarah Thomas was part of that opening crew, after meeting Sohm during a fateful dinner at Le Bernardin with her cousins. When her relatives divulged to him that she was a sommelier in Pittsburgh, he proceeded to serve a blind tasting to Thomas. “He didn’t say what I got right or wrong. He didn’t care about that,” she tells me. “He just wanted to hear me talk about wine, I guess. So I did.”

When he offered her a job at the end of the meal, she laughed. Sohm didn’t. Thomas promptly packed up and moved to New York. After she spent about nine months at the wine bar, Sohm promoted her to Le Bernardin, where she worked for another five years. When she decided to start her own business—Kalamata’s Kitchen, which aims to teach kids about other cultures through food—Sohm was one of her earliest investors. He may have found full-time teaching to be too banal, but it’s still a huge part of what he does now, identifying the next generation of stars and giving them the guidance to grow into their own—whether that takes them into the upper echelons of fine dining or beyond the white tablecloths altogether.

Sohm’s side hustles include a line of wineglasses, a Grüner Veltliner produced in his native Austria, and books such as Wine Simple: Perfect Pairings.

Overseeing two teams, at two very different spaces, feeds Sohm’s prodigious ambition. He’s on a mission to completely reshape the world of wine, from what’s in your glass to the glass itself to what you enjoy it with—say, Champagne with eggs. Along with his day jobs, he has partnered with the Austrian brand Zalto to create his own wineglasses. “As a sommelier, you criticise only, but you make nothing,” Sohm says. So, he also now wears the winemaker hat, producing a Grüner Veltliner under the Sohm & Kracher label, a relatively accessible quaff that’s a collaboration with his fellow countryman Gerhard Kracher. And in 2019 he added author to his résumé, releasing Wine Simple, a “totally approachable guide”, as the book’s subtitle puts it. He followed that up with Wine Simple: Perfect Pairings, to help you pick the right bottle for the right meal and the right moment.

“In wine pairings, you have three possible combinations,” Sohm says. “There’s the perfect pairing. Then sometimes you have flavours just going along… it’s like humans—they talk, they interact, but they never connect. And then there’s conflict.” It’s that first one he’s after every time.

“Sohm fell in love with wine when he was about 21. Prior to that, he was a self-proclaimed Bacardi and coke guy.”

Outside of the restaurant, the wine bar and the cellar, Sohm is an avid cyclist who owns six bikes, a number he admits is excessive—especially in New York City. Riding is what he credits with keeping him healthy, when so much of his time is spent eating and drinking—and drinking some more.

Still, despite the 18-year career at one of the world’s best restaurants, despite the top honours from his peers, despite the wine and the wineglasses and the wine books, Sohm doesn’t consider himself successful. Every day, he’s trying to figure out how he can self-correct. “I like what I do, so I go back home that night, think of things which I can improve,” he says. “I get annoyed when I make a mistake, but I improve the next day.”

His quest for perfection may never be over, but Sohm does concede that he’s happy—its own type of success. Sometimes he finds that happiness while sipping a glass of 1980 Domaine de la Romanée-Conti La Tâche, a bottle now so rare and coveted that he calls it “unattainable”. And sometimes, if to his chagrin, he finds it while drinking a mass-produced rosé on the beach.

Photography by Tori Latham

This article appears in the Autumn issue 2026 of Robb Report Australia New-Zealand. Click here to subscribe.

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Going For Gold

Available in a range of shades and intensities, this metallic tone is still a first-place choice.

By Rachel Gallaher 18/05/2026

Above: Awakening 02, Sebastien Durelli Designed exclusively for StudioTwentySeven, Sebastien Durelli’s Awakening 02 floor lamp is available in a limited run of eight examples. Handcrafted in Italy from cast patinaed bronze, the striking piece takes inspiration from the naturally sculpted landscapes of Iceland, specifically the country’s glacial lagoons. The organic boulder-esque shade is rugged and elemental—like an exploded rock wrenched apart by seismic activity—while the base is sleek and symmetrical, providing visual balance in a deep bronze finish. From around $65,300

Above: Orion, De La Espada When it comes to the Orion dining table, the draw is in the details. Designed by Anthony Guerrée for De La Espada, this piece features a central base crafted from a series of overlapping wood slats—a textured moment that creates visual equilibrium with its smooth, curved-brass counterpart. A bona fide visual anchor, the Orion can be paired with thin-framed chairs for a sneak-peek view or heftier seats that provide a surprising reveal when guests sit down to dinner. From around $20,870

Above: LS35A, Luca Stefano This showstopper by Milan-based designer Luca Stefano is all curves. A sexy lounge sofa, seen here upholstered in Pierre Frey mohair with canaletto walnut details, the LS35A is available for customisation, but we think that this mossy-gold hue is incredibly chic, evoking the muted desert tones popular during the ’60s and ’70s. Around $66,280, as shown

Above: Jazz, Tom Bensari Part of master woodworker Tom Bensari’s Manhattan collection for StudioTwentySeven, the Jazz bookcase is an ode to the designer’s love of music. With edges that curve like brass instruments and shelves that skip like riffs, this unit is meticulously hand-built in Poland from oak and olive wood, with custom veneered interiors according to the client’s preference and a glowing finish that takes on a golden tint in just the right light. Around $29,320

Above: Sleeper, Lucas Simões Last September at Christie’s in Los Angeles, Brazilian artist Lucas Simões unveiled his first furniture collection, Colendra. Presented in Lightness & Tension, an exhibition curated by roving gallerist Ulysses de Santi, Simões’s work is rooted in material exploration, as seen in the Sleeper chair, a curving steel form that suggests Brazilian midcentury modernism. A unique patina—which imparts the shimmery, rainbow-esque look of an oil slick—gives the piece a contemporary, artistic feel. Around $22,440

This article appears in the Autumn issue 2026 of Robb Report Australia New-Zealand. Click here to subscribe.

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