GTI Coming Home Photo 5

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“It’s like the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance except every car here is a Volkswagen,” an enthusiast shouted from behind the wheel of a dark red late-model GTI carrying its underbody an inch or two off the ground. He sped off, followed by a white GTI that somehow sat even lower than the first.

I couldn’t have asked for a better – or a more accurate – introduction to the GTI Coming Home event Volkswagen organizes a stone’s throw from its historic factory in Wolfsburg, Germany. The firm welcomes every type of GTI, and there are a lot of branches on that family tree. We only see the tip of the iceberg in America: the Golf. In Europe, Volkswagen also GTI-ifies the pocket-sized up! and the Polo. Historically, it has also put the badge on the Scirocco, the Lupo, and several generations of the Polo.

The VW GTI TCR is your 286 hp front-wheel drive hyper hatch

The second-annual GTI Coming Home event drew fans from all over Europe. Volkswagen recorded 16,000 show-goers in no less than 4,000 cars. And yet, I struggled to find two identical ones. Nearly every GTI there boasted a robust set of modifications that made it unique. Some were lower than when they left the factory, some were a lot more colorful, some rode on considerably bigger wheels, and a few had more cylinders under the hood than what’s written in the original sales brochure. Almost none were left fully stock. It was a tuner’s paradise and a purist’s worst nightmare.

Every generation of the Golf GTI sent representatives to the event, though fourth- and fifth-generation cars were thin on the ground. For purists, the highlights included a second-generation GTI with the more powerful 16-valve engine. It was painted in an eye-catching shade of metallic green and it looked like it had rolled out of the nearby factory five minutes before driving to the event. Volkswagen’s very own third- and fourth-generation GTIs turned heads, too, while the Golf Limited plucked from the company’s collection flew right under the radar. Nearly 30 years after its market launch, this uber-rare super-hatch remains as low-key as the day it was new.

Those who like their Volkswagens low and wide were in for a treat, too. Dozens of curious fans stopped to check out a purple third-generation Polo which likely didn’t start life as a GTI – only 3,000 of those were made – but ended up with a VR6 engine shoehorned between its fenders. It basked in the late summer sun around the corner from a first-generation Jetta powered by an Audi five-cylinder engine with a gold-plated valve cover. The owner of an early Golf showed off a Bacardi bottle he enigmatically installed in the engine bay under the watchful eye of Volkswagen’s 290-horsepower GTI TCR concept. Two cars down, a Golf Rallye replica did its best impression of the real thing lurking a few rows behind it.

The sound of engines revving began filling the air at 4:30 pm. Participants prepared for one of the highlights of the event: a rare opportunity to parade down the main road that runs through the Wolfsburg factory. The twin-engined Golf driven to victory in the 1987 edition of the Pikes Peak Hill Climb led the convoy with both engines roaring and Jochi Klein – the German pilot who won the race – smiling behind the wheel. It was followed by a rare Golf Rallye, a turquoise third-generation Golf built in a hotel parking lot the night before the event, and a long succession GTIs returning to the nest for the first time.

The GTIs parted ways in the exact same manner they met: by flooding every major street in Wolfsburg. The locals didn’t mind losing a few minutes in traffic; many of them have played a role in developing, building, or preserving the GTI over the past 42 years.


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