Some credit the styling of the P100 to Pietro Frua, though this site devoted to Frua has a question mark [?] by the car (scroll down to 1959). If Frua wasn't the stylist, then it is likely that another Italian or perhaps a German heavily influenced by Italian design did the work. It certainly looks Italian in spirit with some late-1950s German touches.
1961 Borgward P100 for sale. Usually the diamond-shaped Borgward logo on grilles was uncomfortably large, but on the P100 it's surprisingly discrete.
Factory photo: note the Hamburg license plate.
Probably the same car seen from a different viewpoint. The windshield is wrapped slightly and is quite tall, extending about to the high point of the roof.
Left side. Very much a "three-box" design. Little side sculpting or decoration. The wrapped backlight window is perhaps the most Germanic touch.
Rear quarter view via Wikimedia. The main side sculpting was a high fender line crease, the upper side of it becoming an extension of the belt line that transitions to a mini tail fin. All this does provide some relief to potential side blandness (see the previous image), but the fins strike me as being a bit silly. Rear end styling is slightly awkward because the round light assemblies clash with the rounded-rectangular chromework. The fins also do not relate to other rear elements.
The license plate mentioned starts with "HB" which indicates that Bremen, not Hamburg is the place of immatriculation. The Borgward factory was located in Bremen. Areas are coded with one letter for the biggest cities (B for Berlin, F for Frankfurt, M for Munich, K for Köln/Cologne and so on). Smaller cities had two letters and rural areas were designated with three letters. H stands for Hannover while being way smaller than Hamburg (HH) The reason is that HH means "Hansestadt Hamburg", HB "Hansestadt Bremen" and so on for Lübeck and nowadays Rostock. "Hansestadt" means member of the medieval trade confederation https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanseatic_League
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