An impressive collection of luxury rare cars will be offered at US auction. More than 566 cars and parts that belonged to German immigrant Rudy Klein sit on the outskirts of Los Angeles.
In 1967, he discovered the mysterious Porsche Foreign Auto warehouse, which even then looks abandoned, but has a high steel fence and barbed wire behind which luxury cars such as Lamborghini, Porsche and Ferrari are kept.
Rudy Klein, who moved to the United States in the 1950s, never talked about his collection and access to his supercar depot was strictly limited.
After his death in 2001, his relatives decided to take care of the safety of the collection. Now, according to the Daily Mail, the vintage cars will be put up for auction at the end of October, and according to RM Sotheby's, their sale will bring Klein's heirs millions of dollars.
Among the lots are three restored Lamborghini Miura cars, considered the first supercars, which today are worth about two million dollars each, and they are just part of Rudy's prized collection.
We will remind you that at the end of August another abandoned cemetery for classic cars was discovered in America. This array houses more than ten thousand vintage American cars outdoors in Arizona, most of which were manufactured before 1964.