
This photo was taken when I was in Milan in 1987. I was invited out to the museum at Arese. It was winter, November, and not open to the public. They unlocked the museum for us and had a cleaning lady follow us around, turning lights in the galleys on and off as we walked from gallery to gallery, which is why the lighting is so bright up front and dark in the background. Needless to say this was not a formal photo shoot by any means, and was hard to get a good focus, but it is a rather evocative shot. And yes, we climbed in and out of most of the cars!
By S.Scott Callan
While we at VeloceToday were setting up two articles concerning the Merosi Alfa Romeo RLSS, we thought it might be nice if S.Scott Callan would allow us to use his remarkable researched and animated article on the RLSS from his website, www.velocitygroup.net. To learn more about Scott’s fascinating site, click here to read the accompanying piece.
Merosi’s Masterpiece: the Romeo series L The advancements being incorporated into the car Merosi and his team were engineering when the G1 was released signaled the end of brass era engineering principles and the beginning of a new era of automotive design.