Citeria 600cc “Documented history”

New arrival
Body styleCabriolet
TransmissionManual
Mileage14218 km
Year1961
VAT / MarginMargin
  • A quintessentially Dutch project from the 1950s - Only one Citeria manufactured
  • Fully restored and refurbished
  • Something for your man cave?
  • A small car with a great story - "Something about opportunism - fraud - prison and the scrapyard"
52.500,-

Import & Export

We can assist in cars purchased from the US and arrange transportation. We'll take care of all necessary papers. Please contact us for further information.

Unveiling a Dutch sports car at Circuit Zandvoort, inviting national television, and having Carel Godin de Beaufort drive a demonstration lap. Then, only a few days later, the man behind the project is arrested. You may already have guessed it: this is no ordinary automotive story.

The originated in the 1950s from the plans of garage owner Puck van Beekum. Following an earlier automotive venture, he needed a new project that could simply generate income. Together with engineer Han van der Blij, he therefore began developing a small Dutch sports car with a fiberglass body and compact BMW mechanicals.

On November 17, 1958, the result was officially unveiled at Circuit Zandvoort. The press attended, television crews recorded the event, and racing driver Carel Godin de Beaufort demonstrated the car on track. Even Stirling Moss is mentioned in the surviving accounts as having been present. For such a small Dutch project, the Citeria certainly did not receive a modest introduction. But shortly afterward, everything went badly wrong.

Just a few days after the presentation, Van Beekum was arrested for financial reasons. The ambitious plan to produce a Dutch sports car came to an abrupt halt. As one can easily imagine, there was no factory filled with Citerias, no exports to America, and no extensive brochure offering a range of different versions. Exactly one car remained.

That makes this perhaps one of the simplest production figures in Dutch automotive history: one built, one preserved.

The Citeria featured a lightweight fiberglass body, independent suspension, and an air-cooled BMW two-cylinder engine. Period specifications quoted a top speed of approximately 135 kilometers per hour. In a car this small, with the bodywork wrapped closely around you, it must undoubtedly have felt considerably faster.

This unique example was fully restored and rebuilt toward the end of the last century. As a result, the Citeria presents today as a carefully preserved survivor of a project that could easily have disappeared altogether.

Opportunism, grand ambitions, alleged fraud, a prison sentence, and ultimately near extinction—all embodied in one small sports car. Is this the car you would want to drive in rush-hour traffic every morning? Probably not. Is it something for your collection, company showroom, or mancave? Absolutely.

A Dutch one-off with BMW engineering, unveiled at Zandvoort, associated with Stirling Moss and Carel Godin de Beaufort, and accompanied by a history so extraordinary that a screenwriter might struggle to believe it actually happened. A small car with an exceptionally big story. Are you brave enough to take it on? We certainly know what we would do.

Contact Gallery Aaldering today and discover this unique automobile for yourself. We export our vehicles worldwide—please inquire about the available possibilities.