Back in 2017, as Volkswagen grappled with the fallout from the Dieselgate scandal, the brand made a bold pivot toward electrification. The ID. family of concept cars became the face of a cleaner, forward-looking VW—starting with the original ID. showcar in 2016 and followed by the ID. Crozz a year later, which previewed what would eventually become the ID.4. But behind the scenes, something more emotional and less utilitarian was brewing in the design studio: a fully electric sports car that never saw the light of day.
Recently, Volkswagen Group’s Spokesperson for Design & Concept Cars, Štěpán Řehák, shared never-before-seen sketches of this lost EV on LinkedIn—an elegant and muscular coupe born from the creative mind of designer Tibor Juhasz. What emerged was not just a concept, but a love letter to a nearly forgotten chapter of VW’s past: the SP2.
For the uninitiated, the original SP2 was a sleek, rear-engined sports coupe built in Brazil in the 1970s. Based on the humble Type 3 platform, it was VW’s way of offering something exotic and aspirational to the South American market, without straying far from its mass-market roots. While it was never a high-performance machine, the SP2’s design became iconic—a rare flair from a brand known more for practicality than panache.
Juhasz’s 2017 vision reimagined that heritage for the electric age. His SP2 concept, based on the modular MEB architecture underpinning VW’s modern EV lineup, carried the soul of its predecessor into the future. The result? A low-slung, wide-bodied coupe with strong rear haunches, minimalist surfacing, and an unmistakable sense of purpose. “My SP2 proposal was born from pure intuition,” Juhasz wrote. “It envisioned an electric future powered by progress, yet deeply rooted in classic values.”
While VW never officially greenlit the project, the car’s design stood out as a beacon of what could have been—a spiritual successor to the SP2 that embraced emotion over mass appeal. It would’ve likely featured a rear-mounted electric motor, consistent with the MEB platform’s architecture, offering rear- or potentially all-wheel drive. In spirit and design, it was poised to deliver not just performance, but presence.
The concept also drew subtle inspiration from legendary designer Giorgetto Giugiaro, the man responsible for shaping the first Golf, Scirocco, Jetta, and even the radical W12 supercar prototypes. Although Giugiaro had no direct hand in the original SP2, his design legacy clearly informed the modern reinterpretation’s proportions and simplicity.
Yet, like so many of VW’s most enticing design studies, the electric SP2 remained a dream deferred. Volkswagen had more pressing matters: launching high-volume EVs like the ID.3, ID.4, ID.5, and ID.7 to regain global trust and meet looming emissions regulations. Even the nostalgic ID. Buzz found its way to production—but the sports car was quietly shelved.
This isn’t the first time VW has teased enthusiasts with compelling concepts only to leave them on the cutting room floor. Remember the 2009 BlueSport mid-engined roadster? Or the 2005 EcoRacer and 2014 XL Sport—each powered by unconventional diesel or motorcycle engines? All sparked excitement, only to fade into obscurity. Even the W12, VW’s most audacious sports car effort, remained a design showcase rather than a showroom reality.
Today, with Europe’s impending ban on internal combustion cars, there’s little chance we’ll see another gasoline-powered VW sports car. But that doesn’t mean performance is off the table. Wolfsburg has already pledged to carry its GTI and R performance sub-brands into the electric era. And while those badges are steeped in hot hatchback history, the idea of a standalone, two-door electric sports car—a proper spiritual heir to the SP2—still stirs the imagination.
The MEB platform remains flexible. The design talent is clearly there. All that’s missing is the green light. If VW ever chooses to chase emotion over volume, it has the blueprint waiting—quietly sketched in pencil back in 2017.
Source: Volkswagen