Tolman Revives a 1990s Icon
A shift is underway in the restomod world, with overlooked performance cars now gaining recognition as cultural and engineering icons. Few embody that change better than the Honda/Acura Integra Type R (DC2), long regarded as one of the purest front-wheel-drive driver’s cars ever built. British specialist Tolman has applied its “sympathetic” restoration philosophy to the model, focusing on preservation rather than reinvention.
That renewed appreciation is also being reflected in the market. Clean, well-preserved examples of the Integra Type R have surged in value, with top-tier cars reaching as much as $120,000 at auction, once-unthinkable territory for a car that was originally an attainable performance hero.
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Restoring What Time Took Away
What began as a solid donor car soon revealed corrosion beneath previous repairs. Tolman responded with a full structural restoration, fabricating hard-to-source panels by hand, including rear quarters and sections of the floor. Around 180 hours were spent on metalwork alone, prioritizing integrity over cosmetic fixes.
Mechanically, the approach remains faithful. The 1.8-liter B18C engine was rebuilt to its original 190-horsepower specification, while the suspension retains its double wishbone layout, enhanced with modern dampers and refreshed components. Inside, original materials were sourced to preserve the cabin’s period-correct feel.
Tolman
The Lowdown
Finished in Sorrento Green as a subtle personal touch, the Integra maintains its unmistakable identity. The 740-hour build, validated on the road, feels less like a reinterpretation and more like a return to factory peak – an approach that mirrors what enthusiasts increasingly want from modern restorations.
In an era dominated by electrification and digital interfaces, many drivers are gravitating back toward analog, connected experiences, one reason 1990s and early-2000s cars are becoming highly collectible. There’s also a growing recognition that cars from that era weren’t just engaging but, in some cases, engineered with safety advantages that have since been lost. Taken together, it helps explain why models like the Integra Type R are no longer just nostalgic favorites, but serious collector machines.
Tolman