The Avanti was developed at the direction of Studebaker president,
Sherwood Egbert, who took over in February 1961. The car's design theme was "allegedly doodled by Egbert on the proverbial back of an envelope during an airplane flight." Egbert's 'doodle' was to answer
Ford's Thunderbird and an attempt to improve the automaker's sagging performance. Designed by
Raymond Loewy's team, comprising Tom Kellogg, Bob Andrews, and John Ebstein, on a 40-day crash program, the Avanti featured a radical fiberglass body mounted on a modified
Studebaker Lark 109-inch convertible chassis and powered by a modified 289
Hawk V8 engine. A
Paxton supercharger was offered as an option. In eight days, the stylists finished a "clay scale model with two different sides: one a two-place sports car, the other a four-seat GT coupe." Tom Kellogg, a young California stylist hired for this project by Loewy, "felt it should be a four-seat coupe." The Avanti's complex body shape "would have been both challenging and prohibitively expensive to build in steel" The Avanti featured
disc brakes in the front that were British Dunlop-designed units, made under license by
Bendix, "the first American production model to offer them." The Avanti was one of the first
bottom breather designs, where air enters from under the front of the vehicle rather than via a conventional grille above the front bumper. This design feature became much more common after the 1980s. == Launch ==