Name The company's name is a combination of the original name, "A.L.F.A." ("Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica Automobili" - “Lombardian Automobile Factory Corporation”), and the last name of entrepreneur Nicola Romeo, who took control of the company in 1915.
Foundation and early years (this is with
Castagna torpedo body) was the first car made by Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica Automobili (A.L.F.A.) in 1910.|alt= The first factory building of A.L.F.A. was in the first-place property of
Società Anonima Italiana Darracq (SAID), founded in 1906 by the French automobile firm of
Alexandre Darracq, with some Italian investors. One of them, Cavaliere Ugo Stella, an aristocrat from
Milan, became chairman of the SAID in 1909. Ugo Stella, with the other Italian co-investors, founded a new company named
A.L.F.A. (Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica Automobili), buying the assets of Italian Darracq that was up to dissolution. However, the onset of the
First World War halted automobile production at A.L.F.A. for three years. In August 1915, the company came under the direction of Neapolitan entrepreneur
Nicola Romeo, who converted the factory to produce military hardware for the Italian and Allied war efforts. Munitions, aircraft engines and other components, compressors, and generators based on the company's existing car engines were produced in a vastly enlarged factory during the war. After the war, Romeo invested his war profits in acquiring locomotive and railway carriage plants in Saronno (
Costruzioni Meccaniche di Saronno), Rome (Officine Meccaniche di Roma), and Naples (Officine Ferroviarie Meridionali), which were added to his A.L.F.A. ownership. Car production had not been considered at first, but resumed in 1919 since parts for the completion of 105 cars had remained at the A.L.F.A. factory since 1915. In 1920, the name of the company was changed to Alfa Romeo with the
Torpedo 20–30 HP the first car to be so badged. Their first success came in 1920 when
Giuseppe Campari won at
Mugello and continued with second place in the
Targa Florio driven by
Enzo Ferrari. Giuseppe Merosi continued as head designer, and the company continued to produce solid road cars as well as successful race cars (including the 40–60 HP and the
RL Targa Florio). In 1923,
Vittorio Jano was lured from
Fiat, partly due to the persuasion of a young Alfa racing driver named Enzo Ferrari, to replace Merosi as chief designer at Alfa Romeo. The first Alfa Romeo under Jano was the
P2 Grand Prix car, which won Alfa Romeo the inaugural world championship for Grand Prix cars in 1925. For road cars, Jano developed a series of small-to-medium-displacement 4-, 6-, and 8-cylinder inline engines based on the P2 unit that established the architecture of the company's engines, with light alloy construction,
hemispherical combustion chambers, centrally located plugs, two rows of overhead valves per cylinder bank and dual overhead cams. Jano's designs proved both reliable and powerful. Enzo Ferrari proved a better team manager than a driver, and when the factory team was privatised, it became
Scuderia Ferrari. When Ferrari left Alfa Romeo, he went on to build his own cars.
Tazio Nuvolari often drove for Alfa, winning many races before the
Second World War. 2900 Scuderia Ferrari In 1928, Nicola Romeo left, and in 1933 Alfa Romeo was rescued by the government, which then had effective control. Alfa Romeo became an instrument of Mussolini's Italy, a national emblem. During this period, it built bespoke vehicles for the wealthy, with bodies normally by
Carrozzeria Touring or
Pininfarina. This era peaked with the
Alfa Romeo 2900B Type 35 racers. The Alfa factory (converted during wartime to the production of
Macchi C.202 Folgore engines: the Daimler-Benz 600 series built under license) was bombed during the Second World War and struggled to return to profitability after the war. The luxury vehicles were out. Smaller, mass-produced vehicles began to be produced beginning with the 1954 model year, with the introduction of the
Giulietta series of
berline (saloons/sedans), coupes and open two-seaters. All three varieties shared what would become the
Alfa Romeo overhead Twin Cam four-cylinder engine, initially displacing 1300 cc. This engine would eventually be enlarged to 2000 cc and would remain in production until 1995.
Post war Once motorsports resumed after the Second World War, Alfa Romeo proved to be the car to beat in Grand Prix events. The introduction of the new formula (
Formula One) for single seat racing cars provided an ideal setting for Alfa Romeo's Tipo
158 Alfetta, adapted from a pre-war voiturette, and
Giuseppe Farina won the first Formula One World Championship in 1950 in the 158.
Juan Manuel Fangio secured Alfa's second consecutive championship in 1951. In 1952, Alfa Romeo experimented with its first front-wheel-drive compact car, "Project 13–61". It had the same transverse-mounted, forward-motor layout as the modern front-wheel-drive automobile. Alfa Romeo made a second attempt in the late 1950s based on Project 13–61. It was to be called Tipo 103 and resembled the smaller version of its popular Alfa Romeo Giulia. However, due to the financial difficulties in post-war Italy, the Tipo 103 never saw production. Had Alfa Romeo produced it, it would have preceded the Mini as the first "modern" front-wheel-drive compact car. In the mid-1950s, Alfa Romeo entered into an agreement with
Brazil's Matarazzo Group to create a company called Fabral (
Fábrica Brasileira de Automóveis Alfa, "the Brazilian Alfa automobile factory") to build the
Alfa Romeo 2000 there. After having received government approval, Matarazzo pulled out under pressure from Brazil's President
Juscelino Kubitschek with the state-owned
FNM company instead commenced building the car as the "FNM 2000" there in 1960. During the 1960s, Alfa Romeo concentrated on motorsports using production-based cars, including the
GTA (standing for Gran Turismo Allegerita), an aluminium-bodied version of the
Bertone-designed coupe with a powerful twin-plug engine. Among other victories, the GTA won the inaugural
Sports Car Club of America's
Trans-Am championship in 1966. In the 1970s, Alfa Romeo concentrated on prototype sports car racing with the
Tipo 33, with early victories in 1971. Eventually the Tipo 33TT12 gained the
World Championship for Makes for Alfa Romeo in 1975 and the Tipo 33SC12 won the
World Championship for Sports Cars in 1977. As Alfa Romeo was a state-controlled company, they were often subject to political pressure. To help industrialize Italy's
underdeveloped south, Alfa Romeo's new compact car was to be built at a new factory at
Pomigliano d'Arco in
Campania. Even the car's name,
Alfa Sud (Alfa South), reflected where it was built. 18 January 1968, saw a new company named "Industria Napoletana Costruzioni Autoveicoli Alfa Romeo-Alfasud S.p.A." being formed, 90% of which belonged to Alfa Romeo and 10% to Government controlled holding company
Finmeccanica. This plant was built in the wake of France's
1968 protests and Italy's
Hot Autumn and was never "properly started." The employees had mainly construction backgrounds and were not trained for factory work, while industrial relations were troublesome throughout. Absenteeism rates in the Pomigliano factory ran at 16.5 percent through the 1970s, reaching as high as 28 percent. By the 1970s, Alfa Romeo was again in financial trouble, with the company running at about sixty percent of capacity in 1980.—and IRI president
Romano Prodi put Alfa Romeo up for sale. Finmeccanica, the mechanical holdings arm of IRI and its predecessors owned Alfa Romeo since 1932. Prodi first approached fellow Italian manufacturer Fiat, which offered to start a joint venture with Alfa.
Fiat takeover Fiat withdrew its plan for a joint venture with Alfa Romeo when
Ford put in an offer to acquire part of Alfa Romeo and restructure the company, while increasing its stake over time. However, Fiat chose to put in a bid to acquire the entirety of Alfa Romeo and offer job guarantees to Italian workers, an offer that Ford was unwilling to match. It also did not hurt any of the parties involved that an acquisition by Fiat would keep Alfa Romeo in Italian hands. In 1986, the deal was concluded with Alfa Romeo merged with traditional rival
Lancia into Fiat's Alfa Lancia Industriale S.p.A. Models produced from the 1990 onwards combined Alfa's traditional virtues of avant-garde styling and sporting panache with the economic benefits of product rationalisation, and include a "GTA" version of the
147 hatchback, the
Giugiaro-designed
Brera, and a high-performance exotic called the
8C Competizione (named after one of Alfa's most successful prewar sports and racing cars, the
8C of the 1930s). In 2005,
Maserati was bought back from
Ferrari and was now under Fiat's full control. The Fiat Group then created a sports and luxury division from Maserati and Alfa Romeo. There is a planned strategic relationship between these two; engines, platforms and possibly dealers are shared. In the beginning of 2007, Fiat Auto S.p.A. was reorganized and four new automobile companies were created; Fiat Automobiles S.p.A., Alfa Romeo Automobiles S.p.A., Lancia Automobiles S.p.A. and Fiat Light Commercial Vehicles S.p.A. These companies were fully owned by Fiat Group Automobiles S.p.A. (from 2007 FCA Italy S.p.A.). On 24 June 2010, Alfa Romeo celebrated 100 years from its foundation.
Recent developments Alfa Romeo has been suffering from falling sales. In 2010, it sold a total of about 112,000 units, which was significantly lower than Fiat CEO Marchionne's global sales target of 300,000. The company set about to achieve a sales target of 170,000 units in 2011, including 100,000
Giulietta and 60,000
MiTo models, but it actually sold 130,000 units that year. Its medium-term target was 500,000 units by 2014 including 85,000 from the North American market. In 2017 Alfa Romeo increased production by 62 percent, building a total of 150,722 vehicles at the company's three factories. On 16 January 2021, the operations of
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles and
Groupe PSA were merged to form
Stellantis and the company was renamed Stellantis Italy. In spite of falling sales, Alfa Romeo CEO Jean-Philippe Imparato announced in 2021 that a new model would be launched every year between 2022 and 2026, starting with the much-delayed
Tonale, with full electrification of new models from 2027.
Return to North America Alfa Romeo was imported to the United States by
Max Hoffman from the mid-1950s. The Giulietta Spider was developed on the request of Max Hoffman, who proposed an open top version of the Giulietta. In 1961 Alfa Romeo started exporting cars to the United States through its own dealer network. In 1995, Alfa Romeo ceased exporting cars to the United States, the last model sold in that market being the 164 sedan. On 5 May 2006, Alfa Romeo made its return to the US Market as announced by Fiat CEO
Sergio Marchionne after a series of rumours. North American sales resumed in October 2008, with the launch of the limited production 8C Competizione coupe with Alfa Romeo models being imported by Fiat's US subsidiary Chrysler. Also in 2008, Alfa Romeo and Chrysler were reported to be in discussions over the possibility of producing Alfa Romeo cars in some Chrysler manufacturing plants that had shut down due to the company group's restructure and cost cutting. Instead, as reported by
The Wall Street Journal in November 2009, Chrysler discontinued several Dodge and Jeep models while phasing in Alfa Romeo ones and the new Fiat 500. The next significant milestones in Alfa Romeo's North American return occurred in 2014, with the launch of the more affordable two-seater
4C coupe. That year, Fiat Group Automobiles S.p.A. confirmed that its original agreement with Mazda Motor Corporation, for the speculated manufacturing of a new Alfa Romeo Spider based on the
Mazda MX-5 had been terminated mutually in December 2014. The proposed model for this joint venture became the
Fiat 124 Spider convertible launched in 2015. In 2015, Alfa Romeo's return to this market was further bolstered by the automaker's display of the new
Giulia at the Los Angeles Auto Show. In February 2017, Chrysler featured its Alfa Romeo brand exclusively in three ads during
Super Bowl LI. Alfa Romeo's US importer,
FCA US LLC, currently imports the Giulia, Stelvio, Tonale and 33 Stradale. == Leadership ==