My Car Quest

March 27, 2026

Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale

by Mike Gulett –

In 1984 I bought a “new” Alfa Romeo Spider Veloce in San Jose, California. New is in quotes because it was a demo car that was also driven by Alfa Romeo sales people – yes there were Alfa Romeo dealers in the US in 1984. It had 10k miles when I bought it and I did get a good price taking into account the miles. After I worked out the many early bugs, which should be expected with any Alfa, it was a very fun car to drive. It looked great and sounded great too. We loved the convertible top, which was easy to put up and down and could be done while sitting at a traffic light. I drove that Alfa for 5 years as my daily driver and loved it.

Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale

The Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale is a very rare car—a car so pure in purpose and so near perfect in its execution that it blurs the line between engineering and sculpture.

Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale

Built in 1967–1969, the 33 Stradale is widely regarded as one of the most beautiful automobiles ever made. But to describe it only as beautiful is to miss the point. This was not a styling exercise, it was a race car, barely civilized for the road, carrying the DNA of one of Alfa Romeo’s most ambitious competition efforts.

Racing Bloodlines

The story begins with Alfa Romeo’s Tipo 33 racing program, developed by the competition arm Autodelta under the guidance of Carlo Chiti. The Tipo 33 was designed to compete in endurance racing against rivals from Ferrari and Porsche. It featured a lightweight aluminum chassis and a beautiful 2.0-liter V8 engine—compact, high-revving, and very Italian in character.

Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale

The Stradale (“road”) version was conceived as a homologation special—a way to bring the race car to the street, in theory. In reality, it became something more exotic.

Franco Scaglione

The design of the 33 Stradale is credited to Franco Scaglione, a man whose work often leaned toward the avant-garde. But here, he achieved something extra special—something timeless.
Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale

Every surface of the car feels like it was shaped by wind and intuition rather than ruler and constraint. The low-slung body barely rises above our knees. The headlights are set behind delicate clear covers. The glass canopy doors—hinged dramatically upward—invite us into a cockpit that feels more like an aircraft than an automobile.

Unlike many concept cars of the era, this was no fantasy. The 33 Stradale was fully realized, drivable, and fast.

An Engineering Jewel

Beneath the sculptural bodywork lies a machine of fine precision:
  • Engine: 2.0-liter V8, derived directly from the race car

  • Output: Around 230 horsepower

  • Redline: Near 10,000 rpm

  • Transmission: 6-speed manual

  • Weight: Approximately 700 kg (1,540 lbs)

These numbers seem modest today, but in the late 1960s they placed the 33 Stradale in supercar territory. More importantly, the experience could be exhilarating—sharp throttle response, mechanical noise, and a sense that you were piloting something far closer to a Le Mans race car than a grand tourer.

Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale

Rarity

Only 18 examples of the 33 Stradale were built—some sources suggest even fewer fully completed road cars. Each was assembled largely by hand, and no two are exactly alike.

At the time, it was one of the most expensive cars in the world, costing more than many Ferraris of the day. It did not sell in large numbers, but that was never really the goal.

Today, the Tipo 33 Stradale sits in the top echelon of collectible automobiles. When one appears—rarely—it is treated less like a car and more like a rare and lost artifact.

Influence and Legacy

The chassis of the 33 Stradale served as the foundation for several radical concept cars, including the Alfa Romeo Carabo and the Alfa Romeo Iguana—cars that helped define the wedge-shaped design style of the 1970s.

The 33 Stradale is both a culmination and a beginning: the final expression of curvaceous, organic 1960s design style, and the platform that helped launch the angular future.

Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale

Alfa Romeo’s modern reinterpretation—the new 33 Stradale announced decades later pays homage to the original not by copying it, but by acknowledging its essence: rare, emotional, and so beautiful.

Summary

There are very few cars that feel as necessary as the Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale—as though it had to exist, if only to show what happens when engineers and artists briefly speak the same language together.

And perhaps that is its greatest achievement: the 33 Stradale doesn’t merely belong in a garage. It belongs in a museum—or better yet, on a quiet stretch of road, somewhere along the coast, where beauty still matters and is so appreciated.

Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale

There are not many similarities between a Tipo 33 Stradale and my former Spider Veloce. But they do share a grille shape, a nose badge and an Italian heritage.

Let us know what you think in the Comments.

 

Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale

 

 

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Research, some text and some images by ChatGPT 5.2. Some photos compliments of Alfa Romeo.
Summary
Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale
Article Name
Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale
Description
There are rare cars, and then there are cars that seem to exist outside of time. The Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale is one of those cars.
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Comments

  1. Gorgeous!. Surely they would fetch a good price today.

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