tristan_shale-hester@dennis.co.uk
@tristan_shale
THE words ‘car auction’ may bring to mind images of draughty warehouses, where punters bid for bargain motors. More than 600,000 cars are sold at auction every year, with around 10 per cent going to private buyers, and the rest typically ending up on dealer forecourts.
One auction house whose cars aren’t likely to be spotted under the bunting of a local showroom, though, is Bonhams. Having first set up shop in 1793, the firm started dealing in prestige motor vehicles two centuries later, and it was purchased by another auction house, Brooks, at the turn of the millennium. James Knight, one of Brooks’ co-founders, previously worked for Christie’s, and is now the chairman of Bonhams motoring section, which has offices in London, Bicester, Paris, New York and…
