The Exhibition of HSH The Prince of Monaco's Car Collection is an automobile museum in the La Condamine district of Monaco. [1]
The cars were the personal collection of Prince Rainier III of Monaco (1923–2005), and assembled over a thirty-year period. [1] [2] The collection contains almost one hundred classic cars made in Europe and the United States. [1] Notable cars in the collection include the Bugatti Type 35 driven by William Grover-Williams that won the inaugural Monaco Grand Prix in 1929, [3] and Sébastien Loeb's Citroën DS3 WRC, which he drove to victory in the 2013 Monte Carlo Rally. [4] 38 cars from the collection were put up for auction in 2012 due to Prince Albert II's desire to re-organise and expand the collection. [5]
The cars are displayed over five levels in a specially constructed space in the Terrasses de Fontvieille, [2] and the museum is open daily from 10am to 6pm, excluding Christmas Day and New Year's Day. [1]
43°44′07″N 7°25′19″E / 43.7354011°N 7.4218114°E
The Exhibition of HSH The Prince of Monaco's Car Collection is an automobile museum in the La Condamine district of Monaco. [1]
The cars were the personal collection of Prince Rainier III of Monaco (1923–2005), and assembled over a thirty-year period. [1] [2] The collection contains almost one hundred classic cars made in Europe and the United States. [1] Notable cars in the collection include the Bugatti Type 35 driven by William Grover-Williams that won the inaugural Monaco Grand Prix in 1929, [3] and Sébastien Loeb's Citroën DS3 WRC, which he drove to victory in the 2013 Monte Carlo Rally. [4] 38 cars from the collection were put up for auction in 2012 due to Prince Albert II's desire to re-organise and expand the collection. [5]
The cars are displayed over five levels in a specially constructed space in the Terrasses de Fontvieille, [2] and the museum is open daily from 10am to 6pm, excluding Christmas Day and New Year's Day. [1]
43°44′07″N 7°25′19″E / 43.7354011°N 7.4218114°E