He bought a new car, locked it away in a barn for 38 years… and now they open the door: what appears inside looks like something out of a movie

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Published On: March 18, 2026 at 10:15 AM
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Dusty white 1983 Citroen BX parked outside a house after being stored away for nearly four decades.

Most barn finds are about nostalgia. This one feels bigger than that. In Lincolnshire, a 1983 Citroën BX 16RS has returned to daylight after sitting untouched since 1988, and the family of its late owner hopes someone will restore it instead of letting it disappear.

The backstory is what makes it stick. The owner was a Royal Air Force jet engineer who helped work on Thrust 2, the car that took the world land speed record in 1983. Yet the machine he tucked away for nearly four decades was not a rocket on wheels. It was a practical family hatchback.

A rare survivor with a strange kind of fame

The timing almost feels scripted. Guinness World Records says Richard Noble drove Thrust 2 to an official average of 633.468 mph in October 1983, while contemporary reporting on the project puts its peak speed at 650.88 mph. Around that same moment, the engineer bought his BX and used it for about five years before parking it for good.

When Jonny Smith of “The Late Brake Show” came to inspect the car, he found rust, mouse damage, one missing wheel, and an engine that still would not fire. One old sticker on the rear glass summed up the irony with brutal accuracy. “Loves driving, hates garages.”

White Citroen BX parked inside a cluttered garage after decades in storage, surrounded by tools, boxes, and household items.
A white Citroen BX remains tucked inside the crowded garage where it spent nearly four decades, adding to the eerie, time-capsule feel of the barn-find story.

Why this old Citroën still matters

The BX was never some obscure failure. L’Aventure Citroën says 2,315,739 were built from 1982 to 1994, and its hydropneumatic suspension became one of the car’s signature features. Today, though, it is genuinely rare in Britain.

Data compiled from UK vehicle records show only 194 Citroën BX models currently on the road in the UK, with another 1,083 declared off the road. That puts this barn find in a very different category. It is not just an old car. It is a survivor balanced between scrap and heritage.

The sustainability angle is hard to miss

Why should anyone outside the classic car world care? Because this story lands right in the middle of a much bigger environmental debate. The European Commission says a circular economy works by keeping products and materials in use for as long as possible while reducing waste.

The European Environment Agency makes the point even more plainly: extending product lifespans reduces demand for new materials and new goods, and the average age of cars in use in Europe rose 10% between 2013 and 2022.

The same agency also says premature disposal of consumer goods is linked to 261 million tonnes of CO2-equivalent emissions and 35 million tonnes of waste in the EU every year. In practical terms, that means one careful restoration can represent more than sentiment. It can also be part of a repair-first mindset.

A romantic rescue story, but not a simple one

There is nuance here, and it matters. A restored 1983 gasoline hatchback is not a climate solution for daily commuting through traffic, noise, and exhaust fumes. The EEA says a typical electric car in Europe produces fewer life cycle greenhouse gas emissions than a comparable gasoline or diesel model, with emissions about 17% to 30% lower on average.

So no, the dusty BX is not a blueprint for the future of mass mobility. But that is not really the point. Preserving a rare vehicle for occasional use, education, or collection is different from arguing that older combustion cars should replace cleaner everyday transport.

And that is where this story becomes more interesting. To a large extent, it is about whether we still know how to repair, reuse, and value things before we throw them away.

For now, the Citroën is still waiting. The first revival attempt failed, and the owner’s daughter is still hoping the right buyer will step in and bring it back to its original condition. Maybe that happens, maybe it doesn’t. But the little BX has already made one point clear.

Sometimes the real story is not the speed record in the background. It is the quiet second life of an object that almost became waste. 

The video report was published on “The Late Brake Show“.


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Adrian Villellas

Adrián Villellas is a computer engineer and entrepreneur in digital marketing and ad tech. He has led projects in analytics, sustainable advertising, and new audience solutions. He also collaborates on scientific initiatives related to astronomy and space observation. He publishes in science, technology, and environmental media, where he brings complex topics and innovative advances to a wide audience.

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