1934 Packard Twelve Sport Coupe (by LeBaron)
The 1934 Packard Twelve Sport Coupe represents one of the most striking automotive designs from Packard’s golden era. Count Alexis de Sakhnoffsky’s aerodynamic vision produced a car with gracefully rounded pontoon fenders, flowing running boards that almost merged with the body, and tapered rear styling. While other manufacturers gradually adopted streamlined aesthetics, these LeBaron Packards embraced the concept completely, featuring almost no straight lines anywhere.
This model utilized a special twelve-cylinder chassis (the 1106) with a shortened 136-inch wheelbase derived from the Standard Eight platform. What truly distinguished the Sport Coupe was its revolutionary fastback roofline, similar to Cadillac’s 1933 Aerodynamic Coupe concept. It appeared nearly simultaneously with the Mercedes-Benz 500K Autobahnkurier, which shared remarkably similar styling. Both represented peak streamlining approaches from their respective continents.
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