Objectively, new cars are better than ever. They’re also more homogenous, more gadget-laden, heavier, and more sanitized than ever before. No wonder, then, that the restomod business is absolutely booming. From million-dollar Porsches to carbon fiber Chargers, it seems the only limit to customizing the old cars we love is how deep our pocketbooks go. This Audi TT is a little bit different, however. Not only is it not a high-dollar Singer or Guntherwerks or Eagle, but its styling alterations are unbelievably well-executed.
It’s wild to think of the original Audi TT as a car that’s capable of being restomodded, but they’re getting up there in age now. Production of the coupe kicked off in February of 1998 with the roadster following eighteen months later, meaning the earliest drop-top TTs are about to become 27-year-old machines. What’s more, the vast majority of them were simply used as cars, racking up mileage and weathering in. Call it nostalgia, but I could see why someone with deep pockets would want to wind back the clock with a comprehensive overhaul. Especially when it comes to paying tribute to the Audi TTS concept car shown at the 1995 Tokyo Motor Show.
At first glance, it almost looks like this particular TT hasn’t really changed aside from the addition of concept-aping fender vents and a new coat of paint. It doesn’t have the TTS concept’s cut-down windscreen or center-lock wheels, although the box-fresh appearance definitely fulfils the “resto” part of the restomod term. However, the team at Dutch outfit Autoforma has been hard at work on the little details, and once you really study this car, it’s easy to gain an appreciation for the end result.

For one, the production TT roadster featured an upholstered tonneau cover to hide its stowed top mechanism, but this TTS Roadster restomod deletes its top mechanism and pulls from the concept car with a one-piece, flush-fit, color-matched tonneau. It’s a custom-fabricated panel that seems to have required shaving a whole bunch of trim in order to achieve the desired finish, but Autoforma didn’t stop there. It blended the filler panel between the tonneau cover and the trunk lid with the quarter panels for a seamless look, although there has been a sacrifice in the process: I don’t see a third brake light perched atop the filler panel anymore. Hmm.

Moving around the side of the TTS Roadster restomod, the big change beyond the concept car fender vents is a spindly new set of manually adjustable mirrors sprouting from the front quarter-lights. It’s a subtle alteration, but one that required some serious work considering how the standard TT mirrors mount to the doors. We’re talking filling the mounting holes for the factory mirrors, then doing some glass fabrication to make the new units bolt on, at the minimum. Proper fabrication to pay homage.

Of course, the alterations don’t stop with the roof setup and mirrors. The grilles in the front valence are a little bit smaller to match the concept car, the headlight washers on the front bumper have been shaved for a cleaner look, the rear valence has been reworked to fully surround a revised set of exhaust tips, the aerial’s been shaved, and the late-addition rear spoiler has gone in the bin. The result is a car that almost looks factory, right until you put it next to a truly stock example.

What Autoforma’s done is create one of the more tasteful restomods in recent memory. It hasn’t been dramatically changed, just massaged to be both a subtly better-looking version of itself and a proper concept car throwback. The TTS Roadster restomod displays a great deal of reverence, and while its greyscale exterior isn’t the brightest colorway, the end result looks like a proper missing link between the 1995 concept car and the production model. Sadly, Autoforma is only making one, commissioned by a lucky client.
Top graphic image: Autoforma









That’s gorgeous! I’ve always loved the TT’s look, but this is fantastic.
I appreciate the restraint even if, to my eye, the changes don’t improve the car noticeably. Only a passionate TT devotee would detect any of them, and I’m thinking even within that group, only a few would find anything exciting. Looks like exquisite craftsmanship regardless.
I’m curious what’s the difference between a restomod and just a customized car?
To my way of thinking, a restomod is taking an old car and modernizing it, typically with modern engine, brakes, suspension and probably electronics.
This one is, to my eye, just a customized TT. The TT is already basically a ‘modern’ car so it doesn’t need much updating. It’s not like it was running a solid rear axle and drum brakes on 15″ wheels. Yeah, this one look good (mirrors aside, which I think look kinda tacky) but it doesn’t appear to have had any major hardware upgrades. So is the really a restomod or just a cleaned up, mildly customized, old-ish car?
Or maybe it’s just tech-bro pricing and that’s what makes it a ‘restomod’ now days?
YES! This.
You spelled rich wrong….
There’s subtle, and there’s indistinguishable.
I don’t see enough of a difference to point anything out. The TT always struck me as one of the blander examples of Golf cousins, regardless of what the powertrain or interior appointments might be up to. This treatment makes it even more featureless.
More featureless. Less featured. I’m not sure which way to go. This seems to have been an exercise in Less Is Less.
No performance changes? Of course, without the spoiler, any more hp and you may windup rolling in the ditch. They said the rear gets light over 90.
I was hoping for more, but more “what” I don’t know.
Kind of cool. I drove my mom’s TT roadster 225 in high school. Looking back, it drove like a heavy Abarth. Many have met their demise as parts cars on FB marketplace
That honestly looks pretty great to me. Tasteful without being boring, interesting without being tacky.
I confess I’m a little put off by the minor-but-substantial changes: every little thing they changed dimensionally is now something that only Autoforma has specs for. I’m sure that type of thinking is a few tax brackets below even buying a (handsomely!) restomodded TT, but I know when a lawn care company kicked a rock through my Z4 driver side window with a drum blower, the first “OEM match” window the glass company tried to put in there just plain didn’t fit, didn’t seal at all.
Enough negative nancying though. This is a pretty cool looking rework of a car I always (almost) had a soft spot for.
I’m sure the spoiler delete won’t present any issues.
Nice ! but I liked the old mirror more…