Skip advert
Advertisement

Get Lost: Project Safari is the off-road Lotus Elise you definitely were not expecting

Off-roading and the Lotus Elise aren’t natural bedfellows, which makes the Project Safari even more exciting

The crossover fad really is getting ridiculous now, but according to its makers that’s just the point with the new Get Lost: Project Safari. This highly modified Lotus S1 Elise is a rally-raid style reimagination of the iconic British sports car – the first from new brand Get Lost founded by Automotive photographer GF Williams. And the good news is that it’ll be put into limited production starting later this year. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

The one-off Project Safari’s transformation has been designed ‘to blend rally-inspired capability, road-trip practicality and design-led innovation’ in one two-seater package. To do so, the fundamental Elise body shell has been largely unchanged, but sits significantly higher off the road on much larger rally-style wheels and off-road tyres. 

In order to fit the new wheel and tyre package inside the Elise body, the team at Get Lost has fitted a set of black-coloured wheel arch extensions, which are joined by a set of high-mounted driving lights, bespoke wing mirrors and new LED headlights. The suspension setup is also completely new, providing the obvious raise in ride height as well as wider track widths. 

Project Safari Lotus Elise - front 3/4 rear

Just like you’ll find on a Lamborghini Huracan Sterrato, the intake has been moved from the bodyside to a roof scoop in a distinctive wishbone-design that sits over the Elise’s compact two-seater cabin. This rests on the rear roll hoop, and sits in conjunction with a sculpted tyre-rest on the rear deck for a spare wheel. 

There are no fundamental changes to the engine, according to Get Lost, which means it will run the same iconic K-Series four-cylinder petrol unit as the standard car, as well as a five-speed manual gearbox. This powers the rear wheels, but what is new is the limited-slip differential, plus a rally-style hydraulic handbrake.

Joining the bespoke exterior colour is a fully-retrimmed interior with brown Alcantara, giving the whole cabin a more luxurious and comfortable feeling. 

The Project Safari probably won’t replace the family Toyota RAV4, it is undoubtedly one of few off-road capable Lotus Elises in existence – and might well be considered more convincing a 4x4 than the 2.6-tonne Lotus Eletre.

Now you can buy a car through our network of top dealers around the UK. Search for the latest deals…

Skip advert
Advertisement
Senior staff writer

Senior staff writer at Auto Express, Jordan joined the team after six years at evo magazine where he specialised in news and reviews of cars at the high performance end of the car market. 

Find a car with the experts

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Best future classics 2025: car investments that could make you money
Future classics - header image

Best future classics 2025: car investments that could make you money

Identifying future classic cars is a tricky but potentially lucrative business, here are our future classic recommendations
Best cars & vans
6 Jan 2025

Most Popular

Chinese cars can’t match their European rivals when it comes to engineering
Opinion - Shanghai Auto Show

Chinese cars can’t match their European rivals when it comes to engineering

This new brand of cars might have battery tech on their side, but European buyers want much more than that
Opinion
25 Apr 2025
New electric car MoT tests could be coming to the UK
Tesla Model X on two-post inspection ramp

New electric car MoT tests could be coming to the UK

New technology and driver assistance systems require changes to annual testing, says EC
News
25 Apr 2025
Buying a modern used car for under £10k is almost impossible
Opinion - £10k used cars

Buying a modern used car for under £10k is almost impossible

Phil McNamara discovers that it’s harder than ever to find a good-value car at the affordable end of the market
Opinion
24 Apr 2025