Home » Some Company Went Out Of Its Way To Turn Boring Honda Accords Into Bonkers Sports Sedans

Some Company Went Out Of Its Way To Turn Boring Honda Accords Into Bonkers Sports Sedans

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When I was growing up, the car my parents bought to replace my dad’s old 1968 Automatic Stickshift Beetle was an extremely smart, safe choice: a 1980 Honda Accord four-door sedan. Throughout the 1980s, Honda Accords were absolutely ubiquitous, consistently a significant portion of any road or parking lot you found yourself in. They were eminently sensible, rational cars. I can almost guarantee you that no ’80s era Accord owner ever walked out to their car, took a careful lap around it, and declared, to the heavens and anyone in earshot: “A fine automobile! But I sure wish I had paid twice as much for it, and that the front end was more batshit!” Well actually, this may have happened once, at least, because a doubly-expensive luxo-Accord with a genuinely weird front-end treatment existed. It was called the Rapport Ritz.

Rapport International was one of those peculiar “converter” companies, this one based out of London, somewhat like a coachbuilder-lite. Rapport actually had a showroom in the Mayfair area of London and did the work in Woking, so they were more visible than many similar companies. They’d take existing mass-market cars, and rework them with some body panel changes, lighting changes, and lots of interior upfitting — all in an attempt to make a more unique, premium vehicle out of mundane but reliable and accessible mechanicals.

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Companies like Monteverdi out of Switzerland were an example of this, taking mainstream American cars like the Plymouth Volare and dressing them up in an Italian suit to become the Monteverdi Sierra. It’s still a Volare, but you can’t really tell unless you, you know, look at the doors.

Rapport’s main business was armoring cars like Mercedes S-Classes so its rich, shoot-able passengers wouldn’t get perforated, but the company also had some experience making coachbuilt creations, like its open-top conversion of the MG Metro and a sports car called the Forté, which featured an earlier version of the Ritz unusual front end treatment, which I’ll be showing you in detail very soon here.

What Rapport did with the Accord was pretty similar to what Monteverdi did to the Volare: The company took a reliable, affordable, best-selling car and made it expensive, fancy, and strange. It called its re-worked Accord the Ritz, and it looked like this in profile, which remained its most Honda Accord-like angle:

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Still very much an Accord profile

Just in case you forgot what a bone-stock Accord of this era looks like, here you go:

A CVCC-powered Honda Accord

So, as you can see, Rapport spent most of its time at either end of the Accord, at least for the outside, where it added some body-colored plastic bumper caps and different taillights, in this case borrowed from the British Ford Granada.

A period ad for Rapport's posh Accord

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The new front fenders were made from aluminum, with a new hood and trunklid made from fiberglass. But that’s not what made the Ritz really special, though. The real party trick of the Ritz was at the front end, which looked like this:

Yes, yes, look at that! It’s like pop-up headlights, but the rare and coveted monobrow style!

I can tell by the spacing of those quad round headlights that the front end here is just a stock Accord, but with the grille assembly removed, as you can see the bare radiator back there.

That monobrow I suppose can be thought of as some kind of airfoil, though if Rapport actually did any kind of aerodynamic testing on it, I’ll eat a chunk of my Yugo’s spare tire. With the brow in the down position, the front end did manage a sort of sleek and sinister look, which the normal Accord was rarely accused of.

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Those turn indicators look to be the stock ones as well, repositioned inside that fiberglass bumper.

On the inside, Rapport went all out, slathering the cabin with Connolly leather, which is not only the choice of many prestigious British car makers, but also what the seats are upholstered with in the House of Freaking Commons. I mean, House of Lords would be better, but still, not bad.

There was also better carpeting, a higher-end sound system, but the strangest interior upgrade, at least to me, was this:

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Burl wood is a bold addition to the Accord dashboard

To upgrade the feel of the dashboard, Rapport essentially built a huge piece of wood-and-leather furniture and just plopped it right on top of the existing dashboard. I’ve included an inset picture with a stock Accord dash so you can see how it originally looked–there’s a raised instrument binnacle and a lower dash level, with a clock and some storage trays.

The Ritz covers this all with that burr walnut box, shaped to Tetris right onto the dash, making the whole thing a good four or five inches taller, though the company did thoughtfully add in a little door on the passenger side so you can access all of that dead, enclosed space under that thing.

I’m surprised Ritz didn’t appear to have replaced the clock in there? The documentation says the car has one, but perhaps it’s not visible in this shot.

All this extra stuff added about an extra 110 pounds to the Accord, so Rapport bolted a little turbocharger onto the Honda’s 1.6-liter inline-four, which normally made about 80 horsepower. The turbo only ran at 3psi, so it likely didn’t change the Accord’s performance that much, but I suppose that’s enough to compensate for the weight of a good-sized pit bull that the outfitter added to the car.

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Rapport also added about $6,634 dollars to the price; at $14,404 it was that much more than the Accord’s base price of about $7,770 (well, in the equivalent US dollars to the British pound price). In modern money, this means a new Rapport Ritz would set you back about $52,538. That’s just about double the $26,866 that a 1980 Accord’s price would be today.

I mean, you did get a lot of fancy bits you could touch and better wheels and tires and a modest turbo boost for your money. Plus, can you really put a price on people looking at the front of your car and asking “what the hell is going on there?”

No. No, you can’t. And about 19 people seemed to agree, since that’s how many Ritzes seem to have been sold.

The company also toyed with the idea of a hatchback (Rapport calls it an Estate in this ad) and convertible Ritz, though all that exists of those are these poorly-airbrushed/doctored photos:

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No one knows how many Rapport Ritzes are left, though one was mentioned as still being around as recently as 2001, which, despite 2000 still sounding like the future to me, isn’t all that recent at all. Personally, I hope it’s somewhere out there, being restored, and becoming a wonderful reminder that even the most boring, normal things can become weird as long as you’re willing to throw enough fiberglass, leather, and wood at it and double the price.

 

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Scott W.
Scott W.
1 year ago

Is it just me or is there a dash of ’81-85 Supra in the hood?
:ps:

Phuzz
Phuzz
1 year ago

There’s a great website in the uk called stillontheroad.co.uk, which lets you check the DVLA records to find which cars are still registered in the UK.
Alas, they don’t have Rapport in the list of manufacturers, so unless they were registered as Hondas (possibly?), there’s none still in the UK.

Still, at least we can all rest easy that there’s still 17 PANTHER KALLISTA’s road legal in the UK.

pip bip
pip bip
1 year ago

never heard of that before, cheers

Dale Mitchell
Dale Mitchell
1 year ago

This is fantastic!
Knew some of these after market mod companies existed, but not to this extent; so many rabbit holes sprinkled throughout..
More please!

Bracq P
Bracq P
1 year ago

Sweeeet! If you like this, are in good health and mentally stable you might try this
https://www.fusselblog.de/die-fiesen-automobilen-80er/
Don’t scroll all the way down right away on your first dose.

Vetatur Fumare
Vetatur Fumare
1 year ago

I always loved these creations, they managed to get into several of the world catalogs of cars back in the days. Good to see that they managed to build 19 of them! The taillight choice makes no sense, though – if you are going to turn a fairly regular car into an exotic, why use one of the most common and recognizable taillight designs out there (for the UK)?
Monteverdi at least started out as a more serious endeavor, the oil crisis and ever stricter design regulations limited them from the 70s on.
In a similar vein (and related to a post from yesterday), Panther rebodied the Triumph Dolomite and called it the Panther Rio. It looked quite lovely.
Best of all, however, is the Felber Pacha. I will let you do your own research, but it involves Switzerland and the X-car. There was also the Felber Rubis, which would be a dream to own.

Arrest-me Red
Arrest-me Red
1 year ago

There is a bit to unpack here. Let me start off with wow.

*reboot in progress…please hold* *Startup complete*

What happened?

The car is interesting. A good try to class it up, but that appears to be the 80s version of buy out autozone and stick it to the car. Then put in on Craigslist.

Doug Lippert
Doug Lippert
1 year ago

“Throughout the 1980s, Honda Accords were absolutely ubiquitous, consistently a significant portion of any road or parking lot you found yourself in.”

Not so in Michigan in the 1980’s. I sold radio ads then print ads between ‘82 and ‘86 in northeastern Michigan. Many parking lots had signs reading “on American cars allowed to park in this lot.” I had a VW Beetle (it was all I could afford) and one guy even yelled at me “get that Kraut car off this lot!” in Lincoln, Michigan.

When Honda built their plant Marysville so their cars were American-made, thing began to change.

Andreas8088
Andreas8088
1 year ago
Reply to  Doug Lippert

Wow… that’s….. something.

Doug Lippert
Doug Lippert
1 year ago

“ Throughout the 1980s, Honda Accords were absolutely ubiquitous, consistently a significant portion of any road or parking lot you found yourself in.”

Not so in Michigan in the 1980’s. I sold radio ads then print ads between ‘82 and ‘86 in northeastern Michigan. Many parking lots had signs reading “on American cars allowed to park in this lot.” I had a VW Beetle (it was all I could afford) and one guy even yelled at me “get that Kraut car off this lot!” in Lincoln, Michigan.

When Honda built their plant Marysville so their cars were American-made, thing began to change.

alpeen-not-alpine
alpeen-not-alpine
1 year ago

The convertible version gives a Cadillac Allante vibes.

Nlpnt
Nlpnt
1 year ago

I’d seen this before, reprinted in one of those gifty “World’s Worst Cars” books and wondered why the “Estate” had such a heavily modified quarter window profile to very little effect. It being airbrushed makes all the sense. Had they actually built one I expect it would’ve looked very much more like a stock Accord hatchback.

Eugene White
Eugene White
1 year ago

Front end looks like a Canadian knockoff Delta Integrale.

Eugene White
Eugene White
1 year ago
Reply to  Eugene White

Airfoil up, that is.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 year ago

I don’t know why this gets derided so much, but then again I wear suspenders with my sweatpants. It’s always important to class things up a bit.

Justin Short
Justin Short
1 year ago

WOW, that’s Fugly!

Anthony Henderson
Anthony Henderson
1 year ago
Reply to  Justin Short

We’re VW people. We’re supposed to appreciate ugly, as well as the aftermarket doing insane things to our cars!

Nic Periton
Nic Periton
1 year ago

Now I know who swiped the taillights from my Granada. The Woking police said that it happened quite often. They thought it was just one of the local taillight fetishists.

Dwegmull
Dwegmull
1 year ago

I’m fairly sure that Monteverdi was a Swiss company (they did use Italian coach builders for some of their cars though).

Ed Vigano
Ed Vigano
1 year ago
Reply to  Dwegmull

You are right.
The Monteverdi Sierra was built/modified by Fissore.
But the base car is Dodge Aspen/Plymouth Volare.

Mark Tucker
Mark Tucker
1 year ago

It looks like all those cars from ’70s-80s sci-fi movies disguised to look “futuristic.”

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
1 year ago
Reply to  Mark Tucker

It really does look like a prop from a moderate budget movie or TV show set in the near future. Just take a current car, bolt some crap onto it, boom, you’re in 1998.

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