The cars : Innocenti-Austin A40 development story

In 1959, Innocenti signed an agreement with BMC that would see it become a car manufacturer for the first time – a deal that would also see the company building the Austin A40 for local consumption.

By 1963, more than 40,000 A40s had rolled off the line in Milan and, as Keith Adams explains, this one had something of a secret…


Italian-market Austin A40 looked almost identical to its UK cousin.
Italian-market Austin A40 looked almost identical to its UK cousin

The first of the hatchback generation

When BMC joined forces with Innocenti in the late 1950s, the first fruit of this appealing union was the Innocenti-built version of the Austin A40. This car was almost a shoe-in for production in Italy: after all, it had been in the vanguard of BMC’s new wave of stylish, Farina-penned models, while also being of the compact two-box design so beloved of Italians.

Production got underway in 1960 and as in the UK, the car would remain in production for the next seven years. However, during that time, the Italian version would see an innovative, even prescient, development which was never offered in the home market.

Austins overseas: Innocenti was one of many

Italy was by no means the first overseas country in which the A40 was built, or rather, assembled. Between the time of its UK launch in October 1958 and the beginning of Italian production towards the end of 1960, it had established itself as something of a world car.

The A40 was exported for assembly in CKD-kit form (Completely Knocked Down) to Australia, Belgium, Holland, Ireland, Mexico, New Zealand, and South Africa.

Of course, the car was also widely exported, to countries such as Norway and Sweden, where it was known as the A40 Futura, and even to the USA, where it was quaintly marketed as ‘The Gayest Economy Sedan Ever’.

European strategy centred on Italy

However, Italy was an important market for BMC to crack, and one from which it had thus far been largely excluded due to a protectionist import policy that saw a high sales tax imposed on cars built abroad.

Production line: Visitors to the Innocenti plant in Milan were always apt to remark on how clean and tidy the factory was, and how efficiently it operated.
Production line: Visitors to the Innocenti plant in Milan were always apt to remark on how clean and tidy the factory was, and how efficiently it operated

To start with, Innocenti also built its A40s from CKD kits. Bearing in mind that the company’s primary business was in the production of industrial machine tools, it was inevitable that before long Innocenti would pressing its own panels and building the cars from scratch.

From the outset, Innocenti had taken great interest in what would be its first car-building project. The company had insisted on making some changes for the Italian market, such as the wind-up windows, that would later find their way on the UK-built cars.

Differences between Innocenti and Austin A40s

Innocenti also took a fastidious approach to build quality, and it is often remarked that the cars they turned out in Milan could teach their Longbridge counterparts a thing or two. Indeed, in a neat coals-to-Newcastle manoeuvre, Innocenti were actually supplying A40 rear axles to Longbridge for a while…

Launch day: A variety of Italian motoring luminaries were gathered for the launch of the Innocenti A40 in 1960. It was the least expensive car in its class – it had been carefully costed to ensure that it could be priced to compete with the ubiquitous Fiat 1100. (Photos: Graham Arnold)
Launch day: A variety of Italian motoring luminaries were gathered for the launch of the Innocenti A40 in 1960. It was the least expensive car in its class – it had been carefully costed to ensure that it could be priced to compete with the ubiquitous Fiat 1100 (Photos: Graham Arnold)

The Italian versions were known as the Berlina (saloon) and Combinata (estate), the latter being the equivalent of the split-tailgate A40 Countryman, as sold in the UK and across the rest of Europe.

In February 1962, the Austin A40 Series 2 version was introduced, gaining the extended wheelbase and handling refinements which had been introduced on the UK’s Mk2 version the previous year.

Other changes included a variety of other minor styling revisions, such as rectangular indicators and side repeaters. However, the Innocenti A40’s most forward-thinking feature would not arrive until the end of the year…

Built with care: The A40S Combinata in production.
Built with care: The A40S Combinata in production

The best innovation of them all

In December 1962, Innocenti’s A40 gained the 1098cc A-Series engine (replacing the original 948cc unit), and become the A40S – as before, it came in Berlina and Combinata varieties, but the latter version had a new trick up its sleeve.

Rather than retaining the split-tailgate of the previous version, the A40S Combinata had a single-piece, top-hinged tailgate – in fact, what we might call a hatchback today. Taken together with the original car’s general dimensions and two-box design, the A40S Combinata arguably set the blueprint for the superminis that would follow around a decade later.

Admittedly, though, under the skin the A40S was still rear-wheel drive with relatively primitive, A35-sourced underpinnings, and its A-Series engine was installed in a north-south configuration.

Was this the first true supermini?

However, bear in mind that it took GM another 13 years to launch the similarly-arranged Vauxhall Chevette, and you get some idea of how ground-breaking the new Combinata’s concept really was.

Supermini, years ahead of its time: The Innocenti-Austin A40S Combinata set the trend for the all-conquering hatchbacks that would follow.
Supermini, years ahead of its time: The Innocenti-Austin A40S Combinata set the trend for the all-conquering hatchbacks that would follow

Ever since the launch of the Series 2 version, the split-tailgate Combinata had been outselling the two-door Berlina, but the introduction of the A40S saw Combinata sales streak ahead.

In 1965, the Berlina was withdrawn from sale, but the Combinata remained in production until 1967 (as did the A40 in the UK), selling steadily alongside the four-door BMC 1100 varieties that also rolled out of the Milan plant. In all, over 67,000 A40s were built there.


Production data

Model Quantity Dates
A40
Series 1
Berlina 10,213 Nov 1960 –
Jan 1962
Combinata 6444 Dec 1960 –
Jan 1962
A40
Series 2
Berlina 6828 Feb 1962 –
Dec 1962
Combinata 9979 Feb 1962 –
Jan 1963
A40S Berlina 6861 Dec 1962 –
Apr 1965
Combinata 27,381 Dec 1962 –
Feb 1967
Total built 67,706 Nov 1960 –
Feb 1967
Keith Adams

7 Comments

  1. What a useful little car the A40S Combinata must have been and has been written, was ahead of its time. In the 60s as a kid I liked the look of the A40 especially in MK2 form. My brother nearly bought a secondhand one, but opted for a Hillman Imp instead.

  2. my brother had a 948cc one ,when i had a go in it i thought it flew . i have seen one done up with the 1275cc engine ,that would go some .

  3. Actually surprised about the extent of the sales difference between the Berlina and Combinata, which stances in sharp contrast to the conclusion at BMC/BL that Maxi aside hatchbacks were NOT the future for its lower-segment cars.

    Now imagine if the hatchback layout was carried over to the FWD Trio from the outset to take full advantage of the transverse FWD layout’s space efficiency unlike the RWD A40 Combinata.

  4. One of those useful cars from history. Your uncle had an immaculate one in grey and white, your mate had a tatty black one full of his work tools and Andrew Gofast raced one at Snetterton. A simple British car with few pretensions but did everything everyone ever asked of it. We were good at that.

    • My Great Uncle had one in the 60s with the rear windows panelled out as a works van. He use to take Him, my great aunt his two sprogs and my mums Mum and Dad, and there 5 kids in it! The days before Elf and Safety

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