
Large-format mineral stone slabs carry the same visual signatures that define the brand's supercars.
Lamborghini's Surfaces Collection premiered on February 5th at an exclusive event inside Valencia's Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia, then appeared at the Cevisama trade fair.
Lamborghini's artistic direction for the slabs draws on scratching lines, sharp proportions, the hexagonal motif from the Huracan's air intakes, and the Y-shaped graphic that recurs across the brand's interiors and lighting.
Lamborghini confirmed no sales targets or production volume forecasts, signaling that the company views the Surfaces Collection as brand reinforcement rather than a significant revenue line.
Lamborghini confirms no public price list, so interested buyers must contact regional distributors directly in a process the brand keeps deliberately exclusive.
The collection totals 17 references: 11 options across three design-driven lines for interior and exterior coverings, plus six colors dedicated to kitchen countertops.
Porsche Design sells chronographs to kitchen appliances and Aston Martin attached its name to a Miami residential tower, so the real test for Lamborghini is whether its slabs carry a legible connection to the cars or simply borrow a logo.
A buyer who specifies Arancio Atlas on a Revuelto can, in theory, coordinate an architectural accent wall in the same visual register, a continuity between garage and living room that licensed merchandise cannot replicate.
The collection accomplishes something most automotive brand extensions fail to achieve: a design connection to the cars that is immediately legible, with the hexagons, Y-patterns, and aggressive proportions translated faithfully into mineral stone.