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Ever thought of a Firebird Station Wagon?

1978 Firebird Trans Am Kammback
This interesting car was a concept car built by PMD (Pontiac Motor
Division). It was labeled as the "K" car for Kammback. The car never
saw production but two models were specially constructed in Italy for
GM's Design vice president David Holls.
The concept was to put out a Firebird station wagon that would provide
a performance car to the public. A silver wagon and gold wagon were
built (total of two) and were 100% factory original as they appear in
these pictures. The gold wagon has been destroyed reportedly due to
internal company issues.
From stationwagon.com: "The 10/1/98 issue of Old Cars magazine has a
short article (pages 23-24) on an experimental 1978 Pontiac Firebird
'shooting brake' station wagon. Constructed for GM by Pininfarina, they
were dropped from production plans because of their projected $24-25,000
price tags (in 1978 dollars). There were evidently two running versions
constructed - one Firebird, and one Trans Am. It's doesn't look like
they had a tailgate, but had two 'gullwing' doors that gave access to
the rear cargo area. The Firebird was crushed by GM, but the Trans Am
survived to be upgraded to 1979 specs and taken on the show circuit
again.
The Type K Back in 1970-71, Chevrolet entertained serious thoughts of
bringing out a production Camaro station wagon. Preliminary development
went along jointly between Chevrolet and Pontiac, but the project
faltered when the two divisions couldn't agree to use interchangeable
doors on the Firebird and Camaro. The original Firebird Type K was done
in 1977 under the direction of GM executive designer David R. Holls.
Studio stylist Jerry Brockstein did much of the detail work. The first
type K (for Kammback) was conceived on the base Firebird, not the Trans
Am. Early prototypes were built of fiberglass. Since production in this
country seemed out of the question, GM Design vice president William L.
Mitchell met with Italian coachbuilder Sergio Pininfarina and arranged
to have two metal-bodied Type K's constructed for show purposes. In
late 1977, Pininfarina delivered the twin wagons -- a silver one with a
red interior and a gold one with a natural beige interior. These were
1978 cars, later converted to look like 1979-80 models. At one point,
Pontiac and Pininfarina checked into the possibility of building Type
K's in Italy or in a special U.S. plant. These limited-production
customs were intended for the American market at a list price of
$16,000. Convertibles were also contemplated at that time. However,
inflation and other costs soon raised vehicle price to $25,000, so the
plan ended up on the shelf. The Deco International Corp. of North
Hollywood, Calif., began building Type K replicas in May 1980.
Conversions cost about $15,000 and consist of fiberglass over a steel
framework. Side windows raise electrically on gas cylinders.
The information you just read, was gathered from
www.indiemonkey.com. Therefore I am not claiming
this as my own, only making another place people can access
this information.
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