Tokyo doesn’t just sparkle—it roars. And for one unforgettable night, it roared in Lamborghini V12s, carbon fiber, and electric torque. For Lamborghini Day Japan 2025, the Italian marque transformed Ariake Urban Sports Park—originally built for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics—into a symphony of passion, performance, and avant-garde design.
More than 500 owners, media, and fans from across Japan and the Asia-Pacific region converged to celebrate not just the brand’s history, but its electrified future.

The Parade of Bulls
The day began with an awe-inspiring parade of over 100 Lamborghinis, snaking from Umi-no-Mori Park along Tokyo’s waterfront through the cultural heart of the city. Aventadors, Huracáns, and Uruses rolled past the Kabuki-za Theater, cruised through Ginza’s neon corridors, and thundered across the Rainbow Bridge—a visual feast that made even Tokyo’s skyline feel like a mere backdrop.
By the time the convoy reached Ariake Urban Sports Park, the stage was set for something bigger than horsepower—a showcase of Lamborghini’s evolution in the age of hybrid performance.
A Night of Premieres: The Fenomeno and the Revuelto Ad Personam
At the center of the spectacle stood two showstoppers: the Fenomeno, Lamborghini’s most powerful V12 “Few-Off” model ever built, and the Revuelto Ad Personam, a bespoke creation symbolizing the art of personalization.

The Fenomeno is a mechanical manifesto: just 29 units, each a rolling sculpture of Italian craftsmanship and technical insanity. Its heart is a naturally aspirated 6.5-liter V12 delivering 835 CV, supplemented by three electric motors adding another 245 CV for a total of 1,080 CV. The result? 0–100 km/h in 2.4 seconds, top speed north of 350 km/h, and braking courtesy of CCM-R Plus carbon-ceramic rotors inspired by motorsport-grade systems.
A new 6D sensor suite gives the car predictive handling control, while the carbon-fiber monocoque and active aerodynamics fuse brute force with intelligence. If the Reventón was the jet fighter on wheels, the Fenomeno is the starship.

Beside it stood the Revuelto Ad Personam, Lamborghini’s hybrid halo car taken to a new level of artistry. Its bi-color gradient exterior fades from Bianco Asopo white to Rosso Khonsu red—a world-first longitudinal fading paint effect inspired by Japanese symbolism. White stands for timeless elegance; red for passion and performance. Together, they mirror both Japan’s national colors and Lamborghini’s dual nature: past and future, art and aggression.
Inside, the Revuelto mirrors that duality with a cabin split in two—white on the passenger side, red on the driver’s—divided by a central tunnel that acts like an emotional axis. Even the start-stop flap carries the same fade, and the embroidery flips the color scheme, a masterstroke in design symmetry.

Heritage Meets Tomorrow
Around the park, Lamborghini assembled a living timeline of its legends: Reventón, Centenario, Sián, and Countach LPI 800-4. Each a stepping stone to the Fenomeno—each a reminder that Sant’Agata doesn’t evolve, it detonates forward.
A separate display featured the Urus SE, Huracán Sterrato, and the original LM002, forming a rugged family tree of Lamborghini’s off-road rebellion. The Temerario, the brand’s new mid-engine hybrid supercar, was presented via an Apple Vision Pro immersive experience—a glimpse into Lamborghini’s next digital frontier.
As Francesco Scardaoni, Regional Director for Asia Pacific, put it:
“Japan stands as Lamborghini’s leading market in Asia Pacific and our third-largest worldwide. The debut of the Fenomeno and Revuelto Ad Personam here is a testament to that bond—where creativity, technology, and emotion converge.”

Design, Culture, and Sustainability
Under the watchful eye of Design Director Mitja Borkert, Lamborghini’s Centro Stile recreated its design process on-site, including a live sketch of the Fenomeno. In another corner, the Polo Storico exhibit honored ten years of preserving Lamborghini’s heritage, headlined by the jaw-dropping Miura SVR, a racing reimagining of the world’s first supercar.
And in true Italian fashion, the night blended speed with lifestyle: Lavazza espresso flowed beside Champagne Carbon, and Roger Dubuis timepieces glittered beside the Huracán Super Trofeo EVO2, the brand’s racing alter ego.
The choice of venue wasn’t accidental. Ariake Urban Sports Park—built on sustainable, modular architecture—echoes Lamborghini’s Direzione Cor Tauri vision: a roadmap toward full hybridization and carbon-neutral production.
For Stephan Winkelmann, Lamborghini’s charismatic CEO, it was the perfect setting:
“Tokyo is a city where heritage and innovation coexist perfectly—just like Lamborghini. Celebrating here feels like celebrating the essence of our brand.”
Lamborghini Day Japan 2025 wasn’t just a car event—it was performance theater, staged with the precision of a samurai blade and the heart of a raging bull.
With the Fenomeno’s record-shattering specs and the Revuelto Ad Personam’s emotional craftsmanship, Lamborghini has made one thing clear: in the electrified era, passion is still measured in decibels, revs, and goosebumps.
Tokyo didn’t just light up—it burned bright in Lamborghini yellow.
Source: Lamborghini