Aston Martin built the one-off Cygnet for a special owner in 2018, who is now finally giving it up to someone else. What if we told you there was a Toyota-based city car with Aston Martin flourishes ...
In a discussion with Autocar, Bez is quoted as saying that the ultimate reason the Cygnet was cut is because Toyota plans on dropping the iQ (on which the Cygnet is based) in 2014 – a claim ...
Every Cygnet started life as a Toyota iQ, a Smart-esque two-seater, and it used the original powertrain in all but one of the 593 examples sold. The Toyota-sourced 1.3-liter four-cylinder sent the ...
Many questioned whether the Aston Martin Cygnet city car was worthy of its family name. However, those critics were silenced in 2018 when Aston’s Q bespoke division produced this V8-powered monster.
Your chance to own the littlest supercar of them all has just appeared out of the blue, because the unhinged 4.7-litre V8-powered Aston Martin Cygnet is up for grabs for the first time. Built as a ...
Based on a Toyota iQ, the Aston Martin Cygnet was a short-lived luxury city car that failed to sell. This one-off swaps the tiny engine for a huge V8.
A one-of-a-kind Aston Martin is being offered for sale for the first time ever - but the car is more Oddjob than 007. With an asking price of 'just under half a million pounds', you might expect ...
Finished in Buckinghamshire Green, the Super Cygnet’s interior - which has more in common with the Vantage than a Toyota – features bespoke black Alcantara and carbon fibre interior, along with Recaro ...