Photo credit: Ferrari
On August 29, 2005, exactly twenty years ago, two Ferrari 612 Scagliettis set off from Shanghai, each oddly decorated: one red with a silver nose, the other silver with a red nose. In addition to a few sponsors, they had a large slogan on their hoods and sides: "Ferrari 15,000 Red Miles." Fifteen thousand miles that would take those mighty V12s, imagined for highways or even racetracks, to explore the whole of China, from south to north, from east to west. A very different China from the one we know today: the explosion of modernity was already recognizable in some large cities, Beijing and Shanghai first and foremost, but the railways, highways, and hotel structures were still almost exclusively in the planning phase. Those cars, followed by two service vehicles with spare parts and technicians, a photographer—a truly talented woman—and a cameraman, set off to tour the entire length of China, often without even the road maps of the stretches they were covering. Maps simply didn't exist!
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