26-year-old Indian man becomes Lamborghini owner after creating amazing custom build using scrap parts
Published on Jul 11, 2025 at 9:09 AM (UTC+4)
by Jason Fan
Last updated on Jul 11, 2025 at 11:28 AM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Kate Bain
Becoming a Lamborghini owner is a dream for many, but one 26-year-old from Kerala, India, found a wildly creative way to make it happen.
Instead of dropping millions, Bibin, a quality assurance professional, built his own version from scrap and spare parts.
What started as a passion project quickly turned into a head-turning replica of the iconic Lamborghini Huracán.
And now, his custom build is taking the internet by storm.
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His family helped to create the ultimate Lamborghini Huracán
Bibin shared his amazing journey to becoming a Lamborghini owner during an interview with YouTuber Arun Smoki.
While his supercar may not have a roaring V10 under the hood, it does have is heart, hustle, and pure imagination.
Built over three years, Bibin worked on the car during late-night sessions after work.
The project uses everything from discarded metal and fibreglass sheets to old car components.
But the scrap metal Lamborghini wouldn’t be possible without the help of Bibin’s family and friends.
For example, his father helped out by helping to salvage mirrors, and cutting them to serve as the car’s side mirrors.
Bibin also added butterfly doors, a Lamborghini-style steering wheel, and a clever nose-lift system operated using a car jack and wiper motor.

Interestingly, he’s not the first person to try and build a scrap metal Lamborghini.
This boy from Nigeria made headlines earlier this year when he built an incredible replica Lamborghini out of scrap metal.
The young TikToker even shared his tricks online, and revealed that he was also working on a replica Lamborghini Aventador SV.
However, a big difference between these replicas and Bibin’s creation is the ability of the latter to actually run.
The scrap metal Lamborghini Huracán is powered by a Maruti Suzuki Alto engine, and it even rolls on Alto wheels.
Just press a button, and the car mimics features of the real deal.


What’s next for the scrap metal Lamborghini
While the drive can’t be exactly be described as smooth, it’s still awesome that it actually moves.
It’s important to remember that Bibin didn’t restore a wrecked Lamborghini Huracán; he built it completely from scratch, using only scrap metal and spare parts.
The main thing that remains unfinished is the interior seats, which currently lack cushioning.

So far, Bibin has spent around $1,800 on this scrap metal Lamborghini project, which is a tiny fraction of what a real Huracán would cost.
The new Lamborghini owner estimates there’s still 20 to 30 percent of work left to complete.
But for viewers online, it’s already a masterpiece.
One commenter wrote: “This is all about mindset. If you can’t buy it, you build.”
Another viewer cheekily referred to him as a competitor to Lamborghini, and many wonder what else he can accomplish if he was given more resources.
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Jason Fan is an experienced content creator who graduated from Nanyang Technological University in Singapore with a degree in communications. He then relocated to Australia during a millennial mid-life crisis. A fan of luxury travel and high-performance machines, he politely thanks chatbots just in case the AI apocalypse ever arrives. Jason covers a wide variety of topics, with a special focus on technology, planes and luxury.