Home » The Designer Of The New Mini Figured Out How To Make The BMW M5 Touring Look Way, Way, Way More Tasteful

The Designer Of The New Mini Figured Out How To Make The BMW M5 Touring Look Way, Way, Way More Tasteful

Bovensiepen 05 Gt 04 Ts5

With the Audi RS6 Avant entering purgatory and the Mercedes-AMG E 63 wagon having last been seen several years ago, there’s only one choice left if you want a new wagon with a big V8: The BMW M5 Touring. With 717 horsepower from its plug-in hybrid V8 powertrain, it’s quick but hefty, and has jowls to match its curb weight. While removing the equivalent mass of a medium-sized fishing hut would be difficult, how far would a little Botox and caffeine go? Thankfully, the minds behind Alpina and the design of the Ferrari F430 have joined forces to make this big wagon a little more tasteful. The Bovensiepen 05 GT is the result.

Wait a second, doesn’t BMW own Alpina now? Quite right, although that doesn’t mean the family that built the original company’s given up on new cars. Last year, Andreas and Florian Bovensiepen revealed both a new firm bearing the family name and a new car, the Bovensiepen Zagato. It’s a BMW M4-based coachbuilt grand tourer commanding serious exotic car money, something for connoisseurs of Bavarian machinery. So what happens when a similar treatment’s applied to the M5 Touring?

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Well, it starts by taking the 4.4-liter twin-turbocharged V8 plug-in-hybrid powertrain and raising the roof a touch. It now kicks out 790 combined horsepower and breathes through a revised induction system and an Akrapovič titanium exhaust. Torque’s up too, from 738 lb.-ft. to 811 lb.-ft. Considering the curb weight of this thing’s still greater than that of a crew cab EcoBoost F-150, a little extra shove seems like a sensible proposition. Bovensiepen’s claiming a zero-to-60 mph time of 3.6 seconds, and that’s plenty. At the same time, a handling package consisting of new top mounts and Eibach springs, retuned adaptive dampers, a bracing package and specially-developed tires promise to iron out the somewhat thumpy ride you’d find on an M5 Touring.

Bovensiepen 05 Gt
Photo credit: Bovensiepen

Sound stuff, but everyone’s talking about the styling of the Bovensiepen 05 GT and for good reason. The marque’s tapped the talents of Frank Stephenson’s design firm to reimagine this big wagon as less new-money. As design team lead Euan McPherson said, “The aim was to create something that has an immediate presence, without being too loud or aggressive.” So, did the team nail it?

Bovensiepen 05 Gt 02 Copy
Photo credit: Bovensiepen

Let’s start at the front, where arguably the biggest visual transformation happens. While the M5 has a glowering mug like it’s downed twelve pints of Carling and now looking to chin the first AMG that walks past, the 05 GT takes a vastly more refined approach. Because the flexible platform results in a lot of height, we can see some strong horizontal elements to balance that out. The framing of the lower grille and its wide center element is a prime example, but a character line running across the fascia does some lifting too. A small lip beneath the bumper and two little winglets in the lower grille balance out proportions, and a more regular set of kidney grilles is the cherry on top. The result is classier than even a base 5 Series, without seeming meek. Now that’s a down-the-road graphic to be proud of.

Bovensiepen 05 Gt
Photo credit: Bovensiepen

It’s a similar deal around the side. Lovely multi-spoke wheels share a general look with those found on the Bovensiepen Zagato and just come across as mega-crisp. Ten tuning forks, all gathered in a circle. Chiseled side skirts with thin black inserts beneath the doors carry a lot less visual weight than the skirts on the M5 Touring, and can we talk about the confidence required to unveil a big, expensive car in silver right now? What was once the de facto neutral has become a bit sleek and alternative thanks to an endless barrage of light non-metallic or dark metallic greys.

Bovensiepen 05 Gt
Photo credit: Bovensiepen

Moving to the back of the Bovensiepen 05 GT, there’s a lot to unpack but in a good way. You know how the rear bumper of the M5 Touring has that strange chunky trim and looks like it’s been stoved in on both corners? This is completely different, and required a rather different way of integrating the reflectors. On the 05 GT, they’re horizontally-oriented and hidden in a thin band of black trim that emphasizes visual width while breaking up the painted surface on the bumper cover. Narrow vertical vents are placed on each end of the trim strip, subtly tied together with a character line that echoes the one above the number plate on the front bumper. Down below the black trim piece, a slim diffuser frames four real exhaust tips, finishing off the valence without dominating it and completing a full skirting package that grounds the look of the car.

Bovensiepen 05 Gt
Photo credit: Bovensiepen

Of course, BMW’s iDrive 8.5 and color-lit interior trim make an appearance in the Bovensiepen 05 GT. Those things are difficult to change, but that doesn’t mean the interior’s unaltered. Yards of Lavalina leather feature on everything from the seats to the steering wheel to the iDrive controller, while milled aluminum paddle shifters look fabulously expensive. Best of all, the sky’s kind of the limit when it comes to stitched materials. Want the entire cargo area in a sueded material? No problem, so long as you have the budget.

Bovensiepen 05 Gt
Photo credit: Bovensiepen

All these revisions mean the Bovensiepen 05 GT won’t be cheap. It starts at €198,000, or about €50,800 more than a BMW M5 Touring. However, it’s also the strongest argument yet that the current crop of German performance cars doesn’t have to look the way they do. The 05 GT still meets cooling requirements and efficiency targets, yet it looks refined instead of ridiculous, crisp instead of overwrought. In short, designed by and for adults. As cars of this sort probably should be. If you need more convincing, check out the side-by-side comparison. Here’s the BMW M5 Touring:

Bmw M5 Touring Isle Of Man Green 2025
Photo credit: BMW

And the Bovensiepen 05 GT:

Bovensiepen 05 Gt
Photo credit: Bovensiepen

Once again, the BMW M5 Touring:

Bmw M5 Touring Isle Of Man Green Rear34
Photo credit: BMW

And here’s the Bovensiepen 05 GT:

Bovensiepen 05 Gt
Photo credit: Bovensiepen

Yep. Much better.

Top graphic image: Bovensiepen

 

 

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Nick Fortes
Member
Nick Fortes
3 days ago

It takes some skill to make the front corner of that green M5 look like a crumpled piece of paper

Really No Regrets
Member
Really No Regrets
3 days ago

Agree that the new 05 GT looks better and more cohesive.

Only the area of soft front and rear ‘bumpers’ changed. The metal doesn’t seem to have been touched.

Last edited 3 days ago by Really No Regrets
Redapple
Redapple
3 days ago

agreed. the bovine one is better

Basher
Basher
3 days ago

I feel like if the release order was reversed, we’d be like “oooh! Now, that’s what the M5 should have been”

Twobox Designgineer
Twobox Designgineer
3 days ago

It is somehow simultaneously comical and disgusting how the M5 looks, compared to how it could have looked as demonstrated by the 05 GT. Although, it has those traits even without the comparison.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
3 days ago

Holy shit that BMW is uglier than a Mansoury.

How odd that it takes the aftermarket to inject some good taste into a BMW.

FiveLiters1
FiveLiters1
3 days ago

While I like the rear of the Glockenspiel, er Bovensiepen a little more than the M5, the front/rest of the car is hard to put against it in that fabulous green color. Also, looking at their logo on the nose in the first pic, google “Balenciaga old logo” and tell me that isn’t basically the same thing?

FormerTXJeepGuy
Member
FormerTXJeepGuy
3 days ago

Looks much better than the actual M5

Fourmotioneer
Member
Fourmotioneer
3 days ago

I don’t understand the new money and taste volunteer gate keeping here. Taste in this case is the NIMBY of the automotive world

I think there really is an issue with this weird combination of auto journalists going to free upscale press events but not understanding the target demographic of a large portion of cars that they review. No need to critique in the misguided hope of influencing a product you hope to buy used in 15 years

What we end up with in cases like this is the equivalent of someone who comments on BaT but has won zero auctions

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
3 days ago

Selling your company with 61 years of respect and brand recognition, then trying to get back into the exact same business with a company with zero brand recognition is crazy.

RallyMech
RallyMech
2 days ago

It happens rather frequently with lucrative buy outs. Money is too good to turn down, 6mo later you’re bored and still want to do what you’ve always done.

George Danvers
George Danvers
3 days ago

I think it’s lovely, and would love to see it in dark green.

Scott
Member
Scott
3 days ago

I agree that the Alpina one looks better, but at these prices, both strike me as a little unhinged.

Un/semirelated: I watched a lady (in a video) swap a new battery into a late-model Mini in an Autozone parking lot, and Dear Sweet Jeebus, what a PITA! I mean: I didn’t assume doing basic service on it (or any newish car) would be as simple as an old Miata, but if that video gets more views, Mini would never sell another car in America again.

Eric Gonzalez
Eric Gonzalez
3 days ago

It does look cleaner and slimmer. The different bumpers and rocker panels are doing a lot of heavy lifting here. It is still far from a pretty car, but an improvement for sure.

Tbird
Member
Tbird
3 days ago

I know which one I’d spend my theoretical F-it money on… While not exactly tasteful, Frank’s team put a hell of a lotta lipstick on that pig.

Last edited 3 days ago by Tbird
CampoDF
CampoDF
3 days ago

Ferrari should have just hired Frank Stephenson instead of Jonny Ive, as he is a real car designer and already worked for them for years. Something tells me the Luce would have been a much more beautiful car.

Box Rocket
Box Rocket
1 day ago
Reply to  CampoDF

Ive shouldn’t have ANY design job. He’s a talentless hack who used his Dieter Rams copycat designs to ride a good marketing campaign to “success” and hasn’t done much else. Right time, right place, and just enough ability to put a new skin on an old product to pull the wool over gullible folks’ eyes.

Stephenson is pretty great, and his team gets it. I enjoy watching their web videos.

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
3 days ago

Wow, that looks so much better. One thing I need to point out as well is that they added a hood to the instrument cluster side of the screen. It still doesn’t look as good as separating the center screen and the instrument cluster, but it’s much better than the regular M5 with the ugly, unhooded giant single screen.

I get doing the unhooded screen thing in an economy car, even if it’s still ugly. In luxury and performance cars it looks completely unfinished. Why bother with trying to create a luxurious or stylish dash and interior just to cap it off with a basic-ass rectangle of screen sticking out of nowhere?

Mr. Asa
Member
Mr. Asa
3 days ago

I’m mildly impressed. I haven’t enjoyed any of the extreme chipmunk faces we’ve been seeing lately. I’m glad someone has found some way to rein it in a bit.

Now do it to all the trucks with the massive face.

D4-D
D4-D
3 days ago

Not a dig at this particular car but the fact BMW didn’t spend the money on making new rear door skins on the latest M3 and M5 i find completely baffling. Only more confusing is how nobody seems to call them out on it. Whenever i see one of these things the first thing my eyes go to is that awkwardly distorted rear wheel arch. We can argue what’s pretty, what isn’t, but there is no excuse for such design compromise on such an expensive car.

Jmfecon
Member
Jmfecon
3 days ago

Looks more elegant on outside, as I would expect of this kind of car. The latest M5 is too much agressive or my taste.

Inside is still ugly af.

Tim R
Member
Tim R
3 days ago

Can I get this in a series 3? I’m fine with the default engine, just give me the body and exterior.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
3 days ago

It looks like a cross between a Skoda and an older BMW.

Not to say it’s terrible, I quite like Skoda, it’s probably not the look that BMW would want to emulate.

A Nonymous
Member
A Nonymous
3 days ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

Skoda was my first reaction as well.

Jason Rocker
Jason Rocker
3 days ago
Reply to  A Nonymous

Yup.

Albert Ferrer
Member
Albert Ferrer
3 days ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

Skoda’s are great!

Just not very aspirational.

Kevin Rhodes
Member
Kevin Rhodes
3 days ago

Looks fine on the outside. Still idiotic on the inside, just with more leather. Still at LEAST 1000lbs too heavy.

And 30% more money? Hardest of hard passes.

Bags
Member
Bags
3 days ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

The weight of the current M models may be the most ridiculous thing about them, on a list of many ridiculous things.

Kevin Rhodes
Member
Kevin Rhodes
3 days ago
Reply to  Bags

No doubt about that at all. 1000lbs lighter and it would still be porky! And wouldn’t need 700hp to motivate it.

Where’s Colin Chapman when we need him? Oh yeah, as dead as my interest in new BMWs.

Droid
Member
Droid
3 days ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

simplify, then add lightness?
nein! verkomplizieren, dann gewicht hinzufügen

SYT_Shadow
Member
SYT_Shadow
3 days ago

The isle of green regular m5 touring looks better than the silver car…

Ferdinand
Member
Ferdinand
3 days ago
Reply to  SYT_Shadow

What screen reader do you use?

SYT_Shadow
Member
SYT_Shadow
3 days ago
Reply to  Ferdinand

“Para gustos, los colores”
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder

Eric Gonzalez
Eric Gonzalez
3 days ago
Reply to  SYT_Shadow

If by “looks better” you mean “looks incredibly ugly”, then yes, you are right.

Bags
Member
Bags
3 days ago

When your car is so ugly that people get excited about a 30% premium to dress it down….

Albert Ferrer
Member
Albert Ferrer
3 days ago
Reply to  Bags

To 90s-ise your BMW essentially.

TheHairyNug
TheHairyNug
3 days ago

According to Wikipedia, Thomas Sycha designed the new Mini. If it was one of these guys, however, I find it ironic, because the new Mini looks like crap

Kevin Rhodes
Member
Kevin Rhodes
3 days ago
Reply to  TheHairyNug

It’s been nothing but downhill since the first BMW MINI. Which I really rather liked the looks of.

CampoDF
CampoDF
3 days ago
Reply to  TheHairyNug

Poorly worded: they mean the refresh of the mini brand – as in the first “new mini” that debuted like 25 years ago. Frank Stephenson also designed the original X5, the Ferrari F430, the Maserati MC-12, the Maclaren P1 and a bunch of other crazy stuff. AKA he knows what he’s doing. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Stephenson

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