Currently reading: Bristol Cars loses appeal against liquidation

Eccentric British car maker must be dissolved to pay creditors, but owners' club vows to save its assets

Beleaguered British car maker Bristol Cars has officially been wound up, with the court-ordered liquidation process now under way.

Documents sent to Companies House reveal the High Court of Justice decided in December that the firm, which has been in existence since 1945, should be wound up, with assets sold off to pay creditors in December. The documents state that nobody attended the session to represent or defend Bristol.

By 17 February, a liquidator - Frost Group Limited - had been appointed. It's unclear how many staff were still working at Bristol, which has lain dormant since its original plan to restart production in 2018. 

A High Court appeal by now-former owner Kamkorp Limited was unsuccessful as of 28 February, the Bristol Owners' Club reports. This means the overarching Bristol Automotive Group, which includes both the sales and servicing operations, will be wound up.

However, the Owners' Club claims it is "actively engaged" with the liquidators in order to "preserve what we can of the heritage and associated spares for the marque".

"It's our hope that the assets can be kept together and, as a priority, a safe home can be found for the archive," it said in a statement.

Bristol is based in Windlesham, Surrey and has a recently refurbished sales centre in Kensington, London. It revealed its first all-new model in decades, the £250,000 Bullet speedster, in 2016.

The news of liquidation comes nine years to the day since Bristol entered administration for the first time in the modern era. Twenty-two jobs were lost at the firm's original factory in Filton, near Bristol, but a new company was formed to sell its assets and then purchased by Kamkorp (which also owns research and technology outfit Frazer-Nash).

Read more: 

The automotive legacy of Bristol: from £200k Alfas to 1000mph Bloodhound SSC

Bristol Bullet to be precursor of electrified models

Remembering Britain's failed car companies - picture special 

Join the debate

Comments
5
Add a comment…
Oldphart 6 March 2020

No joking

Bristol's going bust? No sniggering at the back please.

Pietro Cavolonero 9 March 2020

Fnaar Fnaar

It all went tits up...
russ13b 5 March 2020

indeed

that's pretty much the point i was making, i never understood how bristol did things, it's as if they wanted this to happen all along

Peter Cavellini 5 March 2020

Maybe.

 Maybe, but, they didn't let car mags drive them, sold them if your face fitted, they were out of date selling cars, old fashioned even, and when did you ever see one made this century?