Driven Stories
Ultrace by the Sea
Scenes

Ultrace by the Sea

Something happened we didn't expect. Ultrace moved from Wrocław to Gdańsk, or from Breslau to Danzig if you're German. Anyway, we don't know how long this change will last, but I love it.

It was my fifth Ultrace. It started for me as a dream trip, became a ritual, and is now part of my life. This edition was special because it was the first time my son worked on the Ultrace production team, led by Łukasz Dawczyk, COO of Ultrace and co-founder of Driven Stories. For Łukasz and Adrian Kapica, the CEO of Ultrace, it was their 16th edition.

The biggest difference this year is a shift from a car show, an exhibition full of automotive art, to a pure car festival. It's the Coachella of cars and racing. You get the best of the best celebrating creativity in the custom car industry and heritage, alongside a huge playground for content creators. One of the great surprises was a free Sony equipment rental in the media room, complete with technical and product support. It was a game changer for all of us on the media and editorial side.

Black-on-black lineup of supercars and tuner cars in a moody covered space
photo by @akjark_photo
All-white curated lineup of stanced Porsche 964, BMW E30 M3 and other builds
photo by @akjark_photo

In my view, Ultrace is built above all for the media creators, who compete with each other while supporting everyone else. There is a new breed of Ultracers: young, creative, polite, and laser-focused. As Driven Stories, we want to feature those creative souls who use their own sensitivity to tell human-plus-car stories to people around the world.

Colorful pastel Japanese race karts with retro pinstripe liveries
photo by @akjark_photo
Silver Datsun 240Z displayed inside a modified aluminum trailer for Datsun Europe
photo by @akjark_photo

Ultrace mixes every layer of the car scene at once. Old racing, modern drifting, custom, stance, classics, rallies, Le Mans, you name it. It's all there in proportions you can't fully digest in real time. Drift sits at the heart of the mix, giving the festival its own pulse. The full assault of cars, personalities, and flavors of the industry is hard to put into words. You have to experience it yourself.

Red classic Alfa Romeo GTV with rally lights next to a blue Nissan Skyline R34 GT-R
photo by @akjark_photo

Sung Kang, best known as Han from Fast and Furious, was there promoting his new film Drifter. He was signing literally thousands of movie posters and taking selfies with everyone.

Toyo Tires-liveried Nissan GT-R R35 with the driver in front of Polsat Plus Arena
photo by @akjark_photo

If you're into rallies, you would also have spotted a modest guy from Finland sliding cars on the Ultrace Parking Area, the drifting event that's part of the festival. That was Kalle Rovanperä, two-time World Rally Champion and the youngest in WRC history, now chasing an F1 dream and drifting anything he can get his hands on in between. Seeing a global champion mixed in with the fans without any tight security showed exactly what this festival is about.

Red Nissan 350Z and yellow BMW E46 M3 drifting side by side on the Ultrace Parking Area with a crowd and Polsat Plus Arena behind
photo by @akjark_photo
Japanese-plated Nissan Silvia S15 drift car with the driver waving to the packed grandstand
photo by @akjark_photo

Kalle wasn't the only flag flying from somewhere far. Sultan Al Qassimi came in from Sharjah with two cars that told two very different stories. One was his carbon-fiber-bodied, LS-powered Bentley Continental GT, built from the ground up as a drift car. The other was his 911 Liwa, a safari-prepped 911 named after the desert region it was born to handle. The man runs an in-house workshop in the UAE that turns out builds people don't tend to attempt twice. Two cars from two completely different planets, sitting in a Polish car park near the Baltic. The kind of contrast only Ultrace lets happen this naturally.

Silver Mercedes-Benz race car with the number two beside a Porsche 911 in cool indoor lighting
photo by @akjark_photo

From California, Chris Ashton, the man behind Ruffian Cars, landed with two of his signature builds. The Ruffian 500, a 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 restomod that draws its DNA from the Holman-Moody factory lightweights that won the British Saloon Car Championship in '63. And the Ruffian 40, his modernized take on the original Ford GT40, where everything that felt or performed as vintage gets replaced and only the silhouette stays. Two American shapes, redrawn for now.

Rear low-angle of the Toyo Tires-liveried Nissan GT-R R35 with massive rear wing catching sunlight
photo by @akjark_photo

And then there was Mike Burroughs. If you've ever scrolled through automotive culture on the internet in the last decade, you already know him by his hands more than his name. Founder of Stanceworks, the man who built Rusty Slammington, the famously incinerated, scorched-patina BMW E28 with a 3.7-liter VAC Motorsports S38 inline-six built to scream past 9,000 rpm and a Group 5 widebody. The car survived two garages and one fire and somehow keeps going. Mike is the Tony Hawk of the modified car world, a name that defined an era and refuses to settle into it. Watching him walk the festival with Rusty in tow was one of those moments where you realized half the kids in the venue had probably built their visual taste around what this guy did.

Orange BMW 320 Group 5 in Jägermeister livery, number twenty-five, under a red canopy at the venue
photo by @akjark_photo

And then, somewhere in the middle of all this, a Lotec C1000 and a Lotec Sirius. Both one-offs, both from the same tiny German workshop. The C1000 came first, a 1995 commission for an Emirati oil tycoon. Twin-turbo Mercedes-Benz M117 V8, 1,000 PS, barely over a tonne, $3.4 million at the time. The Sirius arrived six years later with a twin-turbo Mercedes-Benz V12 from the same family that powers the Pagani Zonda, dialed up to a claimed 1,334 hp on 1,280 kilos. Each was the only one of its kind ever built. Both sitting next to each other in Gdańsk. I don't know how to phrase that without sounding ridiculous, so I won't try.

Close-up of the C1000 badge on the rear of the Lotec supercar
photo by @akjark_photo

This is a festival with winners, but no losers. How? Because being one of the 709 selected cars out of thousands of applications is an award in itself. Does that sound like the dreaded participation medal, the running joke about Gen Z? It isn't. The Ultrace team selects cars very carefully, with some unofficial wild cards thrown in.

We got one of those wild cards, bringing in the very first RWB built in Poland. There are twelve of them completed so far, with the next three currently in build. But this isn't my personal memoir of Ultrace, though I'll write that anyway whether you want it or not. I want to remember my own road to Ultrace 2026, which took five years.

Matte black Nissan Skyline R32 GT-R at night with cool blue light streaks
photo by @akjark_photo
Detail of a classic Porsche 911 ducktail rear spoiler and tail light in blue moody lighting
photo by @akjark_photo

"carbonfayba" Godzilla

Anyway, back to winners and losers. The biggest winner is the Nissan Skyline R32 GT-R created by Garage Active from Japan, owned by Kazushige Sakamoto, the "carbonfayba, carbonfayba, carbonfayba" guy. This winner is obvious. The car is sharp, stylish, never cosplayed, a perfect tribute to the Japanese Godzilla translated through modern engineering. You may call Ultrace a Nissan festival sometimes, and that's a fair point.

Full carbon-fiber front of Kazushige Sakamoto's Garage Active Nissan Skyline R32 GT-R with Japanese plates
photo by @akjark_photo

Photos: Aleksander Krajka

Topics: ultracegdanskpolandfestival