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Das Treffen X: How Porsche’s Southeast Asian Heartbeat Found Its Perfect Tempo in Bangkok

By the time the gates opened at Impact Speed Park, it was clear this wasn’t just another enthusiast meet. Das Treffen—now celebrating its 10th edition—has grown into something far more significant: a cultural checkpoint for Porsche passion in Southeast Asia, and a reminder that the brand’s soul has never been confined to Weissach alone.

What started as a low-key gathering organized by Porsche devotee Sihabutr “Tenn” Xoomsai has matured into the region’s most anticipated Porsche event, drawing owners, collectors, and dreamers from across Asia. Ten editions in, Das Treffen feels less like a car show and more like a family reunion—one where air-cooled memories, hybrid futures, and racing DNA all speak the same language.

“Reaching ten editions of Das Treffen is something I never expected,” Xoomsai admits. “It’s the community that makes this event what it is.”

He’s right. But Porsche Thailand deserves credit for turning that community spirit into a carefully orchestrated experience.

A Porsche Playground, Bangkok Edition

Impact Speed Park was transformed into a series of themed zones, each highlighting a different facet of Porsche’s multifaceted identity. At the center sat the Porsche hospitality village—part lounge, part boutique, part playground. Visitors browsed exclusive Porsche Lifestyle merchandise, then strapped into advanced racing simulators to chase lap times on legendary circuits. Equal parts luxury and adrenaline, it was classic Porsche.

Just next door, the Motorsport zone delivered a history lesson that needed no explanation. The centerpiece was a Porsche 956, flown in directly from the Porsche Museum. Even standing still, the Group C legend radiated menace. This is the car that rewrote the rules of endurance racing, winning Le Mans outright four years in a row from 1982 to 1985 and redefining what aerodynamics could achieve at 240 mph on the Mulsanne.

Parked beside it was the modern counterpoint: the Porsche 963 LMDh. Fresh off an IMSA Championship title and a second-place overall finish at Le Mans in 2025, the 963 isn’t nostalgia—it’s proof that Porsche still knows exactly how to win when the lights go out and the clock starts ticking. Together, the two cars formed a rolling timeline of Porsche’s race-bred philosophy: different eras, same intent.

Every Porsche Story, One Event

Elsewhere, Das Treffen X unfolded like chapters in a book Porsche has been writing for more than seven decades.

Adventure was represented by a specially prepared Cayenne S E-Hybrid Coupé, famous for its staggering 22,000-kilometer journey from Bangkok to Stuttgart. Crossing 17 countries in 61 days, the expedition wasn’t a stunt—it was a rolling validation of Porsche durability in the real world.

Performance needs little explanation. The 911 and 718 stood proudly as the benchmarks they’ve always been, reminders that balance, feedback, and mechanical honesty still matter in a world chasing numbers.

Urban looked forward, not back. Taycan and Macan models highlighted Porsche’s electrified future, blending daily usability with the unmistakable feel that separates a Porsche from a mere appliance.

And then there was Heritage—a curated space anchored by the 911 Spirit 70. With its retro colors, period-correct patterns, and unapologetic nostalgia, it celebrated the decade when Porsche wasn’t just a sports car maker, but a lifestyle statement.

Community Beyond the Cars

Das Treffen X wasn’t confined to the showground. Alongside the event, Porsche Asia Pacific hosted its first-ever regional Porsche Club Presidents’ Meeting in Bangkok. Leaders from across Asia gathered to exchange ideas, share standout initiatives from 2025, and strengthen the connective tissue of the global Porsche network.

The day culminated in true Porsche fashion—with people. More than 280 club members converged at Curvistan Bangkok for Porsche Club Night and the opening of a new exhibition curated by Stefan Bogner, fittingly titled Porsche Communities. Set in the heart of Thong Lo, Curvistan proved once again that Porsche understands modern enthusiasm isn’t just about cars—it’s about culture.

“Porsche communities are the heartbeat of our brand,” said Yannick Ott, Director of Marketing for Porsche Asia Pacific. It’s a sentiment that echoed throughout the weekend.

More Than a Milestone

Das Treffen X wasn’t about celebrating the past for its own sake. It was about continuity—how racing heritage informs electrification, how community fuels innovation, and how passion transcends borders.

Ten years on, Das Treffen has become more than an event. It’s proof that Porsche’s most powerful engine isn’t found under a rear decklid or beneath a carbon-fiber body—it’s the people who keep showing up, year after year, united by a crest that still means something.

And if this is what the first decade looks like, the next ten should be worth the wait.

Source: Porsche