About Us

Who We Are

Here At The Speed Shop we are a proud Owner Operator Business

with a passion obsession for all things Automotive

Automotive Culture

Automotive Culture Definition

Car Culture is the shared beliefs, values, purpose, customs, language, arts, institutions, achievements, etc., of a particular group of people that have an affinity for the automobile

.

There is no single car culture. However, some aspects of automotive culture are shared.



The Cars

There is not one car culture.

Car culture is made up of a multitude of interests and subcultures.

If we focus only on cars, we see there are many subcultures.

Antique automobiles, classic cars, traditional hot rods, street rods, kustoms, lead sleds, rat rods, muscle cars, slabs, donks, sports cars, supercars, exotics, concours d'elegance, tuners, lowriders, electric cars, offroad, trucks, vans, station wagons, hearses, military vehicles, art cars, and on and on.

Subcultures also form around specific brands.

MOPAR or NO CAR is a crystal clear creed.

Even cars that don't have a distinctive style, are known for their decade or decades.

Americans love European cars. Europeans love American cars.

Citroen fans? Many.

I know I missed many car enthusiast categories. The interests and subcultures are endless.



Beliefs

The car is a means of self expression. It should be custom and personal to the owner.

Other beliefs range from precision engineering high technology to backyard ingenuity build it yourself.

As far as driving is concerned, on one side the only concern is speed.

"Racing is life. Anything before or after is just waiting." -Steve McQueen

Some like to cruise low and slow.

Some like metal flake and rich colors and some like flat black and patina.

Some groups place a high value on preserving history and education.

You can have your own beliefs or have a strong connection with a tribe.



Values

Subcultures have specific values such as:

  • Honor, respect, brotherhood, loyalty.
  • Compassion, service to others.
  • Patriotism, God and country.
  • Driving skill, courage, speed.
  • Self expression, art, style.



Traditions

Every tribe has specific traditions. They cruise together on Saturday night, they go to specific car events every year. They share a clothing style, music and heroes. Some of wear hats, t-shirts, polos, and even shoes that are valued by a specific tribe.

Traditions play an important role in connecting and perpetuating the culture.



Language

While car culture doesn't have its own language, it certainly does have its unique lingo or slang. Enough where outsiders don’t have a clue about what they're hearing.



The Arts and Artists

Most car enthusiasts enjoy automotive art, photography, Who doesn't love the Beach Boys, Surf Music, Rock-a-Billy, Lowbrow art, Rat Fink, Kustom Culture.

Go to any car show and you will find the men and women that create art. You will find airbrush artists and pinstripers that will paint on anything you have.



Movies

Movies are one of the highest forms of celebrating car culture. Story telling is crucial to understanding and celebrating car culture.

Iconic car movies include Grand Prix (1966), Bullitt (1968), American Graffiti (1973), The California Kid (1974), Smokey and the Bandit (1977), The Cannonball Run (1981), The Fast and the Furious (2001), Cars (2006), Senna (2010), and many more.



Achievements

Every subculture has its automotive heroes: race car drivers, custom car builders, artists, car designers, photographers. Museums are the highest forms of institutions that celebrate and educate.



Institutions

There are many institutions and organizations associated with car culture.

Organizations such as Formula 1 (F1), National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR), National Hot Rod Institute (NHRA), Sports Car Club of America (SCCA), Antique Automobile Club of America (AACA), Sportscar Vintage Racing Association (SVRA), Classic Car Club of America (CCCA), Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA), and many more.

Our culture also includes honoring the past with car museums such as Petersen Automotive Museum, Indianapolis Motor Speedway Hall of Fame Museum, The Henry Ford, Route 66 organizations and many more.



Design and Engineering

Cars designed for enthusiasts are typically considered a work of art. The designs evoke a sense of life almost to the point you believe it is a living soul.



Architecture

Architecture, shaped by car culture, gave us drive-in movie theaters, diners, motels, and even a style of architecture called Googie that started in California in the late 1940s and spread across the nation.

Architect Frank Lloyd Wright had strong ideas about how the car was integral to daily living. He even coined the phrase carport.



Road Trips and Roadside Attractions

Road Trips and Roadside Attractions. Once our vehicles became reliable enough for the whole family to travel longer distances, the leisure road trip was born. Every summer the family would load the car and head a few hundred miles away to some resort or landmark. Motels started springing up, as well as full service gas stations. Businesses would build outrageous or fantastic to capture the traveler's attention.



Benefits of the Big Picture

Here are a few examples to illustrate the benefits of seeing the big picture.

  • Institutions can improve marketing efforts, get more visitors and increase awareness of the cause.
  • Car club leadership can communicate their vision and mission more effectively in order to grow membership.
  • Media and influencers will have a better understanding of local car culture and write more informed articles.
  • Event promoters can build personal connections among the influencers and leaders and improve their marketing power.
  • Businesses can identify more opportunities to better serve customers and increase profits.

As subcultures, institutions, leaders, business owners, marketers, and media, you can maximize your efforts by identifying and leveraging the connections within the culture as a whole.



Take Action

At the bare minimum, here is the one thing you can do to maximize your efforts and contribute to the growth of car culture.

Identify and make connections with the leaders in the major areas of car culture.

  • Identify local institutions (museums, art galleries, etc.)
  • Identify popular car events.
  • Identify businesses that serve car enthusiasts.
  • Identify the best organized car clubs.
  • Identify writers, bloggers, and influencers.

Reach out and introduce yourself to another group. Reach out before you have a need. Establish a meaningful connection. Offer help before asking a favor.

Once you establish and build trusted and respectful connections, achieving your desired results is much easier.



Long Live Car Culture

Anyone that proclaims "car culture is dead" has no clue what car culture is.

Car culture is far from dead.

But here is a warning. Any culture that does not evolve, educate, recruit and communicate is a silent and misunderstood culture.

Car culture is is increasingly becoming a negative term. And honestly, it's our responsibility to fix.

The way to grow car culture is to clearly understand the depth of what a culture is, and then communicate that understanding to all.



Written by James Wilder


ABOUT us ...as Humans


Sophie and Samuel have both been born into families with automotive backgrounds. being raised grazing in the fields of car shows and smell of high octane fuel, helped install a deep passion for the automotive industry. growing up having owned and modified most makes and models of high performance and classic/hotrod vehicles. The appreciation for automotive culture philosophy is now part of our DNA.


Sophie and Samuel and their children, have moved their passion base to Tairua from Whitianga. originally from the bay of islands, so we have a natural affection for the geographical position of Tairua and its beautiful beach vibe atmosphere.

ABOUT our Mechanic


Samuels experience in the automotive industry spans his entire life, starting well before his working career.


  • New Zealand Qualified in light Automotive Engineering lvl 3+4
  • Ford Master technician
  • EV Qualified
  • Warrant of Fitness inspector



Samuel has a vast range of experience from, Dealership and OEM for multiple different automotive manufactures, general automotive maintenance and servicing, tyre and wheel alignment,  race prep and setup, custom fabrication, modification to lvvta standard.


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