At the time, the Torrero featured styling cues that are common today on SUVs and crossovers, including beefy fenders, a large grille and a sharply raked windshield. The interior is swathed in buffalo hide and is equipped with a full array of electronic
gadgets, include a fax machine and video player. Pivoting front seats round out the package.
While some described the Torrero as “revolutionary” and “unforgettable,” the vehicle never made it into production and had fallen off the radar in recent years, residing in a back corner of a Magna facility in Concord, Ontario.
Today, it is something of a “barn find,” a classic car that has been stashed away and protected, until the wraps come off it once again for the public to admire and recall.
Those memories have come into sharp focus for Taylor, who remembers watching a movie on the Torrero’s rear seat video screen.
It was Blade Runner,” he said. “You could also play the very first Atari video game in
the Torrero. Technicians like me were fascinated by the vehicle. We would pop in there on our lunch hour and play Pong. I would love to take my grandkids to the museum when it goes on display. I would tell them this was part of my life. I got
it running, moved it around and babysat it for 15 years.”