Tag Archives: Panamera Turbo Sonderwunsch

Porsche Panamera Turbo Sonderwunsch: When Personalization Becomes Performance Art

Porsche has never been shy about blurring the line between production car and personalized sculpture, but the Panamera Turbo Sonderwunsch might be its most compelling argument yet for the art of bespoke automotive design. First revealed with a custom exterior that looked more at home in Monaco than in a configurator, the brand has now pulled the curtain back on an interior that’s every bit as audacious as the paintwork. The unveiling took place at the Icons of Porsche festival in Dubai—fittingly, a city where the ordinary rarely survives.

A Cabin Built Like a Concept Car—But for a Real Customer

Porsche’s Sonderwunsch program exists for one purpose: to turn a customer’s imagination into metal, leather, and lacquer. According to Alexander Fabig, Vice President of Individualisation and Classic, this Panamera’s interior is meant to demonstrate “our passion for making every customer’s personal dream a reality with the utmost precision.”

Precision is an understatement. The cabin mirrors the exterior’s dramatic fade from Leblon Violet Metallic to black, but trades violet for a sunset hue. A gradient shift from black into Sunset Red Metallic sweeps across seat centers, the parcel shelf, and even the vehicle document folder—because in this car, the details don’t take days off.

Avium Metallic: A Color Born for One Customer

A custom paint shade—Avium Metallic—was created specifically for this project. Outside, it highlights pinstripes, wheel faces, and window frames. Inside, Porsche lets the color take a victory lap.

Avium appears on:

  • The Sonderwunsch lettering on the console
  • Switchgear
  • Sport Chrono display bezel and hands
  • Seat piping
  • Door handles
  • Audio speaker grilles
  • Even the Drive Mode switch ring

It’s rare for a color to feel like a narrative thread, but Avium Metallic binds the cabin and exterior into one synchronized design language.

Craftsmanship That Borders on Excess—In the Best Way

The dashboard and door panels are wrapped in black leather with double stitching in Barrique Red, contrasting cleanly against black-stained chestnut wood inserts. The aesthetic is both quietly traditional and deliberately extravagant.

But the detail likely to spark the most conversation is stitched into the seats themselves. On the driver’s side, the badge carries the coordinates for Zuffenhausen—Porsche’s birthplace. On the passenger side: Leipzig, where the Panamera comes to life. It’s a subtle nod to heritage, and an invitation for future Sonderwunsch customers to embed their own story.

A Humidor and Champagne Cooler—Because Why Not?

If there were any doubt that this car was built for the most particular kind of connoisseur, Porsche’s design team erased it by integrating two concept features that feel straight out of a luxury yacht.

The cigar humidor sits beneath a glass lid in the center console. Cedarwood inserts and a hygrometer keep the microclimate just right, while removable trays hold a cigar cutter and lighter.

Not to be outdone, the illuminated Champagne cooler is tucked into the rear seat, tailored for a small bottle and two glasses. The bottle holder is leather-wrapped, Avium-painted, and embossed with the Sonderwunsch name.

Yes, it’s excessive. No, Porsche doesn’t apologize.

A Luggage Compartment That Laughs at the Concept of ‘Trunk’

Open the rear hatch and you won’t find carpet or plastic trim—everything is clad in leather. Black anodized metal strips framed in Avium guard against scratches, while the loading-sill protector includes real gold flakes suspended in the finish. It’s a trunk you treat like a showroom floor.

The Final Touches

Illuminated door sill plates with brushed black aluminum frame the Sonderwunsch branding. Even the key case and charging cable bag—both leather, both contrast-stitched—are crafted to match the cabin’s palette.

The Panamera Turbo Sonderwunsch isn’t simply a special edition—it’s a rolling argument for what happens when a manufacturer hands over the design reins to a customer with vision and a team with the craftsmanship to deliver. Porsche didn’t just match interior to exterior; it created a cohesive design universe where every stitch, shade, and piece of hardware contributes to the story.

This Panamera isn’t built for mass production. It’s built for the one person who dared to imagine it—and for the rest of us to admire from a respectful distance.

Source: Porsche