Tue is in many ways the same type of man as Bizzarrini. He has that intuitive feeling for what works and what doesn’t and he is not just an “on the paper stylist” – he is a worker who can put his ideas in to reality by himself.When he was ten years old and his friends were building plastic models, Beijer was building wooden scale models of his own designs. Before he turned twenty, he designed and build a full-scale functioning electric scooter. The scooter was displayed at the 2000 International Turin show where it created a lot of attention.

To start with, Beijer would come up with some design ideas for the BEBI chassis and then turn one of these into a 1/4 scale clay model. The brief was simple. The BEBI will be a track day car made for both road and track in the sense that performance and perception will be racing, but also registered for road. In order to make it also a car to use on the road. We felt it must look more like a sports car since we were convinced that very few would feel comfortable driving around town in a sized down Le Mans wannabe racer. The rest of the brief; stay with the Bizzarrini drawings and make it as light, cool and slick as possible.

The final design was based on the idea that the monocoque tub would also serve as the midsection body part. This idea should make it light. For coolness the style is a great mix of sixties and 2000+ and for slickness…well it looked aerodynamic enough.