
Porsche built a one-off GT3 RS in a colour you have never seen on a track car
A track car dressed like a tailored suit, right down to the carbon weave
Porsche has revealed a one-off 911 GT3 RS that looks nothing like the hard-edged track weapons the model is known for. Built through the Sonderwunsch programme, it wears a custom deep metallic brown called Macadamia Metallic and, more unusually, brown-pigmented carbon fibre developed specifically for this car. The result is a GT3 RS that trades shouty aggression for the kind of restraint you would expect from haute couture.
What Sonderwunsch is
Sonderwunsch, meaning special request, is Porsche's modern reinterpretation of a programme that dates back to the 1970s. It allows customers to co-design one-off vehicles directly with Porsche, ranging from Paint to Sample Plus custom colours to comprehensive interior and exterior redesigns through the Factory Re-Commission offering. This GT3 RS was created in collaboration with Porsche Centre Geneva and the Sonderwunsch team in Zuffenhausen, the home of the 911.
The brown carbon fibre is the clever part
Anyone can specify an unusual paint colour. Developing carbon fibre in a custom brown pigment to match it is a far harder thing to do, and it is what sets this car apart. The Macadamia Metallic paint, drawn from the Paint to Sample range, was developed exclusively for this project, and the brown-tinted carbon components were created to harmonise with it. The design philosophy was built around subtle contrasts rather than bold flourishes, using the interplay of light, texture and reflection to do the talking.
The details
The exterior pairs the brown bodywork with a tinted carbon rear wing carrying Weissach branding, orange Porsche lettering and Pastelorange accent rings inside the LED headlights. Inside, the cabin is trimmed in Truffle Brown leather and Race-Tex with orange decorative stitching, carrying the warm, restrained palette through from the outside. The orange accents are the only nod to the GT3 RS's motorsport roots, a deliberate flash of colour against an otherwise understated whole.
Still a 911 GT3 RS underneath
None of the personalisation touches the mechanicals. This remains a 911 GT3 RS, powered by Porsche's naturally aspirated 4.0-litre flat-six producing 525 hp, with the model's aggressive active aerodynamics fully intact. The Sonderwunsch work is purely about appearance and material, which is precisely the point. The car is meant to demonstrate how far Porsche's personalisation can go without altering what the GT3 RS fundamentally is.
AutoNext Take
The genius of this car is the contradiction at its heart. A GT3 RS is the most extroverted, aerodynamically aggressive 911 Porsche makes, and finishing it in muted brown with matching brown carbon fibre is the visual equivalent of whispering while running. That tension between the car's function and its finish is exactly what makes it interesting, and it shows that Porsche's Sonderwunsch programme is now operating at a level where the materials themselves, not just the colours, are bespoke. This is personalisation as genuine craft rather than a configurator with a bigger menu.























