Air | Water — Gunther Werks
Orange County Fairgrounds

April 27, 2024

  • Air | Water 2024 landed on Saturday, April 27, at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Gates opened at 9 a.m. and the fairgrounds filled quickly—indoor halls and outdoor plazas stitched together into one Porsche skyline. I moved between owner-driven entries and more curated “hero” placements, the mix spanning seven decades in a single walk. Under clear coastal light, you could read the contrasts: patina beside paint-to-sample, narrow bodies against modern wide hips, club plates near track rubber. It felt like a full-spectrum roll call—air-cooled lineage meeting its water-cooled descendants on neutral ground.

    I made a beeline for the two fully exposed carbon-fiber exoskeleton builds—one wearing its native weave, the other tinted a deep blue. Without paint, the story is all structure: book-matched seams, weave alignment across arches and sills, fasteners sitting proud like punctuation. The blue car bent the afternoon light differently—cooler reflections, the tint adding depth to the layup—while the clear weave read like a technical drawing brought to life. Up close, you catch the billet hardware, the tight panel gaps, the way the body lines stay honest even with the added width. Side-by-side, they bracket the same thesis: modern materials and obsessive fitment in service of analog feel, not spectacle. That’s the Gunther Werks pitch distilled—and in this light, it’s undeniable.

    Air | Water grew out of the Luftgekühlt playbook. In 2023, the team extended the Mare Island weekend with a Sunday program that welcomed water-cooled Porsches alongside the air-cooled faithful—proof that the format could bridge generations. In 2024, it became a stand-alone show at the Orange County Fairgrounds, and by 2025, the concept returned there with the same blend of owner cars and spotlighted features. It’s the same curatorial DNA—Patrick Long and the Luft crew—applied at a larger scale: open, inclusive, and story-driven, with placement and lighting used to bring visitors closer to the machines.


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