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Cars

by Sofia Brontvein

McLaren Artura Spider: Beauty Over Use, British Brilliance Over Practicality

18 Sept 2025

Supercars are rarely about logic — they are about emotion, heritage, and the way they make you feel before you even turn the key. The McLaren Artura Spider is exactly that kind of machine.

Home owned brand? The McLaren & Middle East connection

McLaren may be born in Woking, England, but these days its passport carries some Gulf stamps. Bahrain’s sovereign wealth fund Mumtalakat still controls the McLaren Group and holds the majority of McLaren Racing, while Abu Dhabi’s CYVN Holdings recently took over McLaren Automotive, the part that builds the cars we actually get to drive. So yes, the Artura Spider is pure British in design and DNA, but it is also “locally owned” in a way — a piece of heritage that now belongs to our region. In practice, this means that every time you floor the V6 hybrid, you are also driving a symbol of how the Middle East isn’t just buying supercars anymore, it is owning the companies that define them.

Engine, transmission & performance: Born on the track

Under the hood, the Artura Spider is as serious as it is beautiful. Hybrid powertrain: a 3.0-litre twin-turbo V6 (hot-vee layout) plus an electric motor (axial flux) giving combined output around 690 hp and 531 lb-ft of torque. 0–100 km/h in about 3.0 seconds, top speed around 205 mph (330 km/h). Dry (lightest) weight in pounds around 3,439 lbs (just 136 more than the Artura coupe).

The chassis is McLaren’s Carbon Lightweight Architecture (MCLA). Handling? Razor sharp. You get rear-wheel drive, an 8-speed dual-clutch seamless-shift gearbox (SSG), and an electronically controlled differential (e-diff). The hybrid battery is ~7.4 kWh, giving between 30-33 km of electric-only range (in city or mild driving mode). For cooling, they have improved exhaust mapping and included cooling upgrades — great for us in the UAE where radiant asphalt turns cars into solar panels at rest.

Exterior & interior: Beauty, minimalism & the show

If this car was a poem, its exterior lines are its verses. The Spider has a retractable hardtop that folds away in about 11 seconds, maintaining that sculpted silhouette. Proportions are perfect: wide stance, sharp shoulders, dynamic profile. Light carbon fibre bits, signature McLaren LED daytime running lights, active rear spoiler... all contribute to looks that stop traffic (literally).

Inside is where minimalism sings. Giant screens? Yes — but not cluttered dashboards. You get a 12.3-inch infotainment screen (McLaren’s MIS II), a digital instrument cluster (~10.25"), lots of touch buttons instead of tons of knobs. Materials are high quality, seats firm but sculpted, you feel like you’re sitting in a handcrafted piece of kinetic art. Little features: 360-degree camera, moving-object detection, driver assistance systems that help more than distract.

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Daily drive vs track beast: The duality

Let’s be real: this car was born for tracks. It is happiest on curves, braking zones, apexes, when you can get your hands dirty with speed. But thanks to its hybrid mode, it isn’t a monster in town. In Comfort mode, electric assist smooths throttle response; it is quieter, manageable in traffic, and usable. Transmission is smooth in city-driving; visibility decent, though you will always feel less practical in stop-and-go.

If you want to show off — roll down the top, let the engine breathe — the Spider delivers. But if you need functionality every day (say groceries, kids, bikes), manage expectations. As I said: bike in Al Qudra didn’t fit. That said, the respect you get on the road? Endless. Drivers, pedestrians, supercar watchers — they all turn heads. That thrill never gets old.

Who this car is for — and who it is not

I adore British cars. There is nothing better: engines that sound like poetry, geometry that respects the human eye, heritage that whispers in every curve, and whims that seem playful yet purposeful. With McLaren, I see all that: racing pedigree, tech mastery, and an elegance that feels like tailoring. The Artura Spider isn’t about practicality. I tried to squeeze my bike in for an Al Qudra ride (yes, very “Sofia move”) and failed miserably. But that is okay. You don’t buy this car to haul cargo — you buy it to haul dreams, curves, admiration.

If you have family, if you haul stuff regularly, or you care deeply about passenger space, ride comfort, and door-to-door practicality — this shouldn’t be your first car. Use it as a weekend toy, a statement vehicle, a crown piece.

But if you are a devoted bachelor (male or female — equal rights, always), if you appreciate heritage, if you believe beauty has function, if you want every drive to feel like art, make the Artura Spider your number one. It gives you performance, presence, and heads turning — all wrapped in British perfection.

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The McLaren Artura Spider is a love letter to speed and design. It doesn’t compromise on style or heritage, but it does ask you to compromise on practicality. And that is fine. Because some dreams aren’t meant for grocery runs.

I drove this car, with minimalism in the interior, with its roaring hybrid heart, under dust and sun, in the city and on open stretches — and I felt alive. Purity of form, explosion of performance. That tension is rare.

Every time I shift gears, fold the top, and see envy in the eyes of traffic, I remember why I adore British cars. Engines that speak, geometry that thrills, heritage that impresses. The Artura Spider doesn’t try to feed your ego — it fuels your soul.