VESPA HISTORY
Enrico Piaggio
Piaggio was founded in Genoa in
1884 by twenty-year-old Rinaldo Piaggio. The first activity of
Rinaldo's factory was luxury ship fitting. But by the end of the
century, Piaggio was also producing rail carriages, goods vans,
luxury coaches and engines, trams and special truck
bodies.
World War I brought a new
diversification that was to distinguish Piaggio activities for many
decades. The company started producing aeroplanes and seaplanes. At
the same time, new plants were springing up. In 1917 Piaggio bought
a new plant in Pisa, and four years later it took over a small plant
in Pontedera which first became the centre of aeronautical
production (propellers, engines and complete aircraft) and then,
after World War II, witnessed the birth of the iconic
Vespa.
The war, a radical watershed for
the entire Italian economy, was equally important for Piaggio. The
Pontedera plant built the state-of-the-art four-engine P 108
equipped with a 1,500-bhp Piaggio engine in passenger and bomber
versions.
However Piaggio’s aeronautical
plants in Tuscany (Pontedera and Pisa) were important military
targets and on August 31, 1943 they were razed to the ground by
Allied bombers, after the retreating Germans had already mined the
pillars of the buildings and irrevocably damaged the
plants.
To rebuild the Pontedera plants,
Enrico Piaggio asked the Allies, who then occupied part of the
grounds and of the buildings still standing, to arrange for the
machinery transferred to Germany and Biella in northern Italy to be
brought back.
This was done rapidly and Armando
and Enrico Piaggio then began the process of rebuilding. The hardest
task went to Enrico, who was responsible for the destroyed plants of
Pontedera and Pisa.
Enrico Piaggio’s decision to enter
the light mobility business was based on economic assessments and
sociological considerations. It took shape thanks to the successful
co-operation of the aeronautical engineer and inventor Corradino
D’Ascanio (1891-1981).
A motor scooter was produced,
based on a small motorcycle made for parachutists. The prototype,
known as the MP 5, was nicknamed “Paperino” (the Italian name for
Donald Duck) because of its strange shape, but Enrico Piaggio did
not like it, and he asked Corradino D’Ascanio to redesign
it.
But the aeronautical designer did
not like motorcycles. He found them uncomfortable and bulky, with
wheels that were difficult to change after a puncture. Worse still,
the drive chain made them dirty. However, his aeronautical
experience found the answer to every problem.
To eliminate the chain he imagined
a vehicle with a stress-bearing body and direct mesh; to make it
easier to ride, he put the gear lever on the handlebar; to make tyre
changing easier he designed not a fork, but a supporting arm similar
to an aircraft carriage.
Finally, he designed a body that
would protect the driver so that he would not get dirty or
dishevelled. Decades before the spread of ergonomic studies, the
riding position of the Vespa was designed to let you sit comfortably
and safely, not balanced dangerously as on a high-wheel
motorcycle.
Corradino D’Ascanio only needed a
few days to refine his idea and prepare the first drawings of the
Vespa, first produced in Pontedera in April 1946. It got its name
from Enrico Piaggio himself who, looking at the MP 6 prototype with
its wide central part where the rider sat and the narrow “waist”,
exclaimed, “It looks like a wasp!” And so the Vespa was
born.
On April 23, 1946 Piaggio & C.
S.p.A. filed a patent with the Central Patents Office for
inventions, models and brand names at the Ministry of Industry and
Commerce in Florence, for “a motor cycle with a rational complex of
organs and elements with body combined with the mudguards and bonnet
covering all the mechanical parts”.
In a short space of time the Vespa
was presented to the public, provoking contrasting reactions.
However, Enrico Piaggio did not hesitate to start mass production of
two thousand units of the first Vespa 98 cc.
The new vehicle made its society
debut at Rome’s elegant Golf Club, in the presence of U.S. General
Stone who represented the Allied military government. Italians saw
the Vespa for the first time in the pages of Motor (March 24, 1946)
and on the black and white cover of La Moto on April 15,
1946.
The Vespa became the Piaggio
product par excellence, while Enrico personally tested prototypes
and new models. His business prospects transcended national
frontiers and by 1953, thanks to his untiring determination, there
were more than ten thousand Piaggio service points throughout the
world, including America and Asia. By then the Vespa Clubs counted
over 50,000 members, all opposed to the “newborn” Innocenti
Lambretta.
No less than twenty thousand Vespa
enthusiasts turned up at the Italian “Vespa Day” in 1951. Riding a
Vespa was synonymous with freedom, with agile exploitation of space
and with easier social relationships. The new scooter had become the
symbol of a lifestyle that left its mark on its age: in the cinema,
in literature and in advertising, the Vespa appeared endlessly among
the most significant symbols of a changing society.
In 1950, just four years from its
debut, the Vespa was manufactured in Germany by Hoffman-Werke of
Lintorf; the following year licensees opened in Great Britain
(Douglas of Bristol) and France (ACMA of Paris); production began in
Spain in 1953 at Moto Vespa of Madrid, now Piaggio Espa�a, followed
immediately by Jette, outside Brussels.
Plants sprang up in Bombay and
Brazil; the Vespa reached the USA, and its enormous popularity drew
the attention of the Reader’s Digest, which wrote a long article
about it. But that magical period was only the beginning. Soon the
Vespa was produced in 13 countries and marketed in 114, including
Australia, South Africa (where it was known as the “Bromponie”, or
moor pony), Iran and China. And it was copied: on June 9, 1957,
Izvestia reported the start of production in Kirov, in the USSR, of
the Viatka 150 cc, an almost perfect clone of the Vespa.
Piaggio had begun very early on to
extend its range into the light transport sector. In 1948, soon
after the birth of the Vespa, production of the three-wheeler Ape
van (the Italian for “bee”) derived from the scooter began, and the
vehicle was an immediate success for its many possible uses.
Numerous imaginative versions of the Vespa appeared, some from
Piaggio itself, but mainly from enthusiasts - for example, the Vespa
Sidecar, or the Vespa-Alpha of 1967, developed with Alpha-Wallis for
Dick Smart, a screen secret agent, which could race on the road,
fly, and even be used on or underwater.
The French army had a few Vespa
models built specially to carry arms and bazookas, and others that
could be parachuted together with the troops. Even the Italian army
asked Piaggio for a parachutable scooter.
While the Lambretta was starting
to enjoy some success, the Vespa was being copied and imitated in a
thousand ways: but the uniqueness of the vehicle ensured Piaggio a
very long period of success, so much so that in November 1953, the
500,000th unit left the line, followed by the one millionth in June
1956.
In 1960 the Vespa passed the two
million mark; in 1970 it reached four million, and over ten million
in 1988, making it a unique phenomenon in the motorised two-wheeler
sector it has sold over 16 million units to date. From 1946 to 1965,
the year Enrico Piaggio died, 3,350,000 Vespas were manufactured in
Italy alone: one for every fifty inhabitants.
The boom of the Vespa, and the
different business prospects of the Piaggio brothers, with Enrico
concentrating on light individual mobility in Tuscany and Armando on
the aeronautical business in Liguria, led the company to split. On
February 22, 1964, Enrico Piaggio acquired the share in Piaggio
& C. S.p.A. held by his brother Armando, who then founded
“Rinaldo Piaggio Industrie Meccaniche Aeronautiche” (I.A.M. Rinaldo
Piaggio).
The Vespa 50 had appeared the
previous year, 1963, following the introduction of a law in Italy
making a numberplate obligatory on two-wheelers over 50 cc. The new
scooter was exempt from this law and was an immediate success. In
Italy sales of vehicles with numberplates decreased by 28 per cent
in 1965 compared to the previous year.
On the other hand, the Vespa, with
its new “50” series, was a great success. The light Vespa was a
successful addition to the Piaggio range and this displacement is
still in production. To date almost 3,500,000 Vespa 50s have been
built in different models and versions, the latest being the ET4 50
launched in autumn 2000. It is the first four stroke Vespa 50cc, and
has a record range of over 500 km with a full tank.
The Vespa PX (125, 150 and 200cc)
is the biggest sales success in the entire history of the Vespa. It
is the “original vintage” - launched in 1977, it has sold over two
million units, and as such is a favourite among those with a sense
of nostalgia but also with the younger market.
The Vespa also has a racing career
behind it. In Europe back in the Fifties, it took part, often
successfully, in regular motor cycle races (speed and off-road), as
well as unusual sporting ventures.
In 1952 the Frenchman Georges
Monneret built an “amphibious Vespa” for the Paris-London race and
successfully crossed the Channel on it. The previous year Piaggio
itself had built a Vespa 125cc prototype for speed racing, and it
set the world speed record for a flying kilometre at an average of
171.102 km/h.
The Vespa also scored a great
success at the 1951 “International 6 Days” in Varese, winning 9 gold
medals, the best of the Italian motorcycles. That same year saw the
first of innumerable rallies with the Vespa: an expedition to the
Congo, which was to be the first of a series of incredible journeys
on a scooter that was intended primarily to solve the problems of
urban and intercity traffic.
Giancarlo Tironi, an Italian
University student, reached the Arctic Circle on a Vespa. The
Argentine Carlos Velez crossed the Andes from Buenos Aires to
Santiago del Chile. Year after year, the Vespa gained popularity
among adventure holiday enthusiasts: Roberto Patrignani rode one
from Milan to Tokyo; Soren Nielsen in Greenland; James P. Owen from
the USA to Tierra del Fuego; Santiago Guillen and Antonio Veciana
from Madrid to Athens; Wally Bergen on a grand tour of the Antilles;
the Italians Valenti and Rivadulla in a tour of Spain; Miss Warral
from London to Australia and back; the Australian Geoff Dean took
one on a round-the-world tour.
Pierre Delliere, Sergeant in the
French Air Force, reached Saigon in 51 days from Paris, going
through Afghanistan. The Swiss Giuseppe Morandi travelled 6,000 km,
much of it in the desert, on a Vespa he had bought in 1948. Ennio
Carrega went from Genoa to Lapland and back in 12 days.
Two Danish journalists Elizabeth
and Erik Thrane, a brother and sister, reached Bombay on a Vespa.
And it is impossible to count the many European scooter riders who
have reached the North Cape on their Vespas.
Few know that in 1980 two Vespa PX
200s ridden by M. Simonot and B. Tcherniawsky reached the finishing
line of the second Paris-Dakar rally. Four-time Le Mans 24 Hours
winner Henri Pescarolo helped the French team put together by
Jean-Fran�ois Piot.
The Vespa continues to travel: in
1992 Giorgio Bettinelli, writer and journalist, left Rome on a Vespa
and reached Saigon in March 1993. In 1994-95 he rode a Vespa 36,000
km from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego. In 1995-96 he travelled from
Melbourne to Cape Town - over 52,000 km in 12 months. In 1997 he
started out from Chile, reaching Tasmania after three years and
150,000 km on his Vespa across the Americas, Siberia, Europe,
Africa, Asia and Oceania. All in all, Bettinelli has travelled
254,000 km on a Vespa.