There are concept cars, and then there are Bentley concept cars—rolling cathedrals to excess that make you want to cancel your mortgage and pledge allegiance to Crewe. The newest of the breed, the Bentley EXP 15, has just broken cover at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, and let’s just say, it’s less “design vision” and more “gilded thunderbolt”.

Now, don’t get too excited: Bentley insists this isn’t a production car. But don’t believe a word of it. Concepts like this are the smoke signals of future Bentleys, and this one shouts two things loud and clear: the brand’s styling future is bold, and its first fully electric car is going to be devastatingly handsome.
At first glance, the EXP 15 looks like it was dreamt up by a designer with one eye on the future and the other firmly on a glass of brandy in 1930. The upright grille, the impossibly long “endless” bonnet, and the rearward cabin scream heritage, specifically a tip of the trilby to the legendary Blue Train Bentley Speed Six Gurney Nutting coupé. That car once outran a locomotive across France. This one, we suspect, could outrun Wi-Fi.
But Bentley being Bentley, it doesn’t stop at nostalgia. Slide your gaze along the EXP 15 and you’ll see the five pillars of Bentley’s new design language taking shape. There’s “Upright Elegance” (a fender line so aristocratic it practically demands a title), the “Iconic Grille” reimagined for the battery age, the “Endless Bonnet Line” (longer than your Amazon wishlist), “Resting Beast” stance (think jaguar about to pounce, not the car, the animal), and the “Prestigious Shield” at the rear, framing a redesigned winged-B badge with all the subtlety of a jewel-encrusted signet ring.

Inside, it’s Bentley theatre at its most audacious. Three seats, just like the Blue Train coupé of 95 years ago, but updated with clever storage for luggage, and yes, even your dog. Imagine telling your cocker spaniel he gets bespoke Bentley accommodation—try not to let the butler hear you.
Robin Page, Bentley’s design director, described Pebble Beach as the “perfect audience” to debut the car. He’s not wrong. Monterey Car Week is crawling with billionaires, collectors, and enthusiasts so discerning they’d send a bottle of Dom Pérignon back if the bubbles looked lethargic. And they loved it.
To sweeten the nostalgia hit, Bentley reunited the EXP 15 with the original 1930 Blue Train Speed Six, both having made the pilgrimage from Crewe. The two cars posed together along California’s 17-Mile Drive, soaking in the Pacific sunshine like a pair of aristocrats comparing yacht sizes.
Of course, now the EXP 15 heads back home to Crewe, to Bentley’s new three-storey Design Studio, where it will continue to influence the cars that you and I will actually be able to buy (or dream about buying). If this is a taste of Bentley’s electric future, it’s looking less like the end of an era and more like a rebirth in velvet slippers.
One thing’s for sure: if the Blue Train had to race today, it wouldn’t stand a chance.
Source: Bentley
































