SLI:Vespa and Lambretta Motor Scoot

During the early 1950s the motor scooter arrived on British shores. The public needed a cheap, reliable means of travelling to work, and after a slow but modest start, sales quickly took off. Dominated by the Italian-built Lambretta and Vespa, the fashionable two-stroke machines soon became the wheels of choice for teenagers and the mod movement of the 1960s. Using contemporary and modern photographs, this is a beautifully illustrated introduction to this stylish form of personal transport.

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Description

Vespa and Lambretta remain the two most iconic motor scooter brands, even four decades after the latter’s demise. But what made them such a European sensation in the postwar era? And why were they particularly popular in Britain in the 1950s and ’60s? Motor scooter expert Stuart Owen explains the rise of Innocenti’s Lambretta and Piaggio’s Vespa, from the wartime ruins of Italy, through years of plenty as the two manufacturers exploited a ready market for affordable, economic transport, and then their decline into more uncertain times as motor cars trespassed on their success. He also explores the rich history of accessorising and customising the scooters, their essential role in the mod movement, and the revival in Vespa’s fortunes following the release of the cult film Quadrophenia.

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Additional information

Weight 0.114 kg
Dimensions 21 × 14.9 × 0.4 cm
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