
A 1982 Lotus Esprit Turbo that has spent three decades sitting untouched in a barn is set to cross the auction block in the United Kingdom, offering collectors a rare look at long-term automotive neglect wrapped in iconic sports car design.
The car, now coated in moss and other organic growth, has been entered into a classic and vintage vehicle auction held at the Haynes Motor Museum. The sale is being organized by Charterhouse, a Dorset-based auction house known for handling estate and specialty collections.
Despite its unusual appearance, the Esprit has been given a pre-sale valuation of £10,000. The car remains visually identifiable beneath the buildup, finished originally in red with a magnolia leather interior. Over time, however, the exterior has shifted dramatically in color as nature reclaimed the stationary vehicle.
The Lotus was built at the company’s factory in Hethel, Norfolk. It was purchased in 1990 with the intention of being restored, and work was carried out over the following years. By the mid-1990s, the car was moved into a Dutch barn, an open-sided agricultural structure, following a change in the owner’s personal interests away from driving and toward dog training.
From that point forward, the Esprit remained stationary. Charterhouse said the car spent the next 30 years in storage, gradually deteriorating as exposure and time took their toll. The decision to sell was tied to the owner’s advancing age, bringing the long-dormant vehicle back into public view for the first time in decades.
The Lotus Esprit holds a firm place in popular culture, having appeared as James Bond’s vehicle in the Roger Moore-era films The Spy Who Loved Me and For Your Eyes Only. That association has helped cement the model’s reputation as one of the most recognizable British sports cars of its era.
Market comparisons highlight the gap between this example and fully usable cars. Well-maintained, drivable 1982 Esprit Turbo models have sold for more than £30,000, underscoring both the restoration potential and the challenges facing the next owner.
When the barn-stored Esprit rolls into the Haynes Motor Museum auction, it will do so not as a showpiece, but as a time capsule shaped by decades of stillness, waiting for its next chapter to begin.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Tyler Childers' 'Snipe Hunt' 2026 Tour: How to get tickets, presale times, prices and more - 2
New York to require social media platforms to display mental health warnings - 3
An Extended time of Careful Nurturing: Individual Bits of knowledge on Bringing up Youngsters - 4
Figure out How to Consolidate Cutting edge innovations in Senior's SUVs - 5
From invasive species tracking to water security – what’s lost with federal funding cuts at US Climate Adaptation Science Centers
When fake data is a good thing – how synthetic data trains AI to solve real problems
Get Cooking: 15 Speedy and Heavenly Recipes for Occupied Individuals
A Manual for the Right SUV for Seniors
The top astronomical discoveries of 2025
The Best Competitors of the 21st Hundred years
Blood pressure drug recalled for possible cross-contamination
Sean Penn lights up, Kylie Jenner gets A-list approval and 7 other moments you didn’t see at the Golden Globes
5 Fundamental Ways to employ a Criminal Legal counselor
Mali and Canadian miner Barrick agree to resolve tax dispute, ending 2-year standoff












