Bugatti Automobili Archive, 1990–1995


A curated archive combining licensable images with editorial content and historical research.

Explore the complete visual archive of Bugatti Automobili in Campogalliano, documenting one of the most innovative and influential supercar factories of the 1990s.
This rare collection presents the architecture, production methods, and design philosophy behind the legendary EB110 — captured through detailed documentary photography. Available nowhere else.

Royalty-free high-resolution files for editorial, commercial, and large-format reproduction.

Archive Overview

Bugatti Automobili — Campogalliano 1990-1995


A detailed documentary photography by Roberto Bigano — Available nowhere else.

About this Archive

Ikonographia holds the complete visual archive of Bugatti Automobili in Campogalliano, documenting one of the most innovative and influential supercar factories of the 1990s. This rare collection presents the architecture, production methods, and design philosophy behind the legendary EB110 — captured through detailed documentary photography. Available nowhere else.
This archive is the only complete documentary record of Bugatti Automobili made from inside: the founder who initiated the enterprise, the architect who designed the factory and restyled the EB110, and the photographer with continuous, unsupervised access — each telling their story in their own words. Such alignment between vision, execution, and documentation is rare in industrial history, and virtually unprecedented in the case of an automobile manufacturer.

Historic Background

The foundation of Bugatti Automobili by Romano Artioli was driven by a radical ambition: to re-establish Bugatti not as a nostalgic brand, but as a contemporary manufacturer capable of redefining performance, elegance, and technological excellence.

This ambition materialized physically in Campogalliano, with the construction of the iconic "Fabbrica Blu", designed by architect Gian Paolo Benedini—an industrial complex conceived not as a neutral container, but as an extension of the cars themselves.

In parallel, the EB110 took shape. Benedini’s role extended beyond architecture into the restyling and formal definition of the car, ensuring coherence between building, process, and product.

Available Stories


Whether your work involves architectural research, Art Deco design, or cultural heritage studies, this archive provides a reliable and meticulously organized visual resource—built progressively, with scholarly care and editorial depth.

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