Rolls-Royce  Motor Cars was  acquired by the BMW Group in 1998. These days, Rolls-Royce models look  more like ordinary cars again (albeit very smart ones), instead of  five-star hotel lounges on wheels. The latest Phantom, launched in 2003,  shows all the care in design and power in performance that have  characterised the company�s cars over the previous century. Easy-access  coach doors that open from the centre, a curved rear seat that  facilitates a feeling of sociability between passengers, umbrellas that  sit in compartments in the rear doors: everything has been thought of. A  new one will cost you around �250,000.
Production is now carried  on at a specially designed, environmentally friendly facility at  Goodwood in West Sussex. This is not far from the famour Motor Museum at  Beaulieu, and only 20 miles from Henry Royce�s final home, a house  called Elmstead in the village of West Wittering. The nearby Goodwood  racing circuit is used for testing new cars, and overseas orders can be  shipped from the port of Southampton. It feels like a fitting home for  what remains the world�s most prestigious car maker.
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