Tuning Atelier Larte Design Presents Extravagant Body Kit for Porsche Cayenne
The world of tuning has always thrived on bold aesthetic decisions. Sometimes this gives birth to inspiring improvements, and other times – to projects that perhaps should have remained digital sketches. The new development from Larte Design clearly falls into the second category, vividly demonstrating that the ability to completely change the appearance of a car like the Porsche Cayenne does not necessarily mean it should be done.
The new kit for the Cayenne is radically different from anything we’ve seen before. It includes a series of accessories made from prepreg carbon fiber that can be installed on the SUV’s body. Instead of traditional carbon with a black finish, the tuner chose a bright pink color. This might appeal to public figures like Paris Hilton, but imagining a wider audience that would stand in line for such an upgrade is quite difficult.
Exterior Details: From Bumper to Diffuser
The kit begins with a front bumper, to which a new splitter is added. Larte also created pink carbon overlays that surround the air intakes and the panel under the black radiator grille.
Further along the body, the Cayenne receives a hood inspired by the 911 design, with additional ventilation holes, two of which are made from the same pink carbon. The theme continues along the sides of the car, where prominent pink carbon wheel arches and side skirts alter the SUV’s profile. On each wheel, white rims with pink accents are installed.
The rear part of the project is perhaps the most dramatic. The tuner developed a completely new diffuser from pink carbon for the Cayenne. New darkened exhaust tips and a small pink spoiler on the trunk lid have also been added.
Technical Features and Availability
According to the tuner, the carbon fiber parts are designed not to interfere with the operation of any standard Porsche safety systems, including parking sensors. The cost of the kit has not been disclosed at this time.
This project once again raises the question of the line between individuality and taste in automotive tuning. Pink carbon is undoubtedly a technological and visual statement that is hard to miss. However, such experiments often remain unique show cars, demonstrating the atelier’s capabilities but not finding mass application. For the Porsche Cayenne, a car valued for its combination of sportiness, comfort, and a certain status, such a radical change of image may prove too sharp, even for tuning connoisseurs. The success of such projects is often measured not by commercial sales, but by the resonance in media and car culture, and here Larte Design seems to have guaranteed itself attention.

