Motor Trend is taking two Genesis V8/Tech to Europe and follow the route of the Orient Express from Paris to Istanbul:
Daybreak, and we're parked outside the Gare de l'Est, one of six major railway stations that serve Paris. Nothing particularly unusual about that, perhaps, except for the cars we're driving -- a pair of California registered Hyundai Genesis sedans, both loaded 4.6-liter V-8s. We're a long way from Orange County, Toto. And we're about to go further.
The Gare de l'Est is where the famed Orient Express began its journey. We've all heard of the Orient Express -- it was featured in Bram Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula, and was the setting for Agatha Christie's 1934 thriller Murder on the Orient Express. James Bond rode it in From Russia With Love. It has become a pop culture icon.
The original Orient Express, inaugurated in October 1883, ran from Paris via Strasbourg, Munich, Vienna, Budapest, and then into Romania and Bulgaria before finishing in Istanbul, the ancient Turkish city where Europe literally meets Asia. Look at the route on a map and it screams road trip. Which is why we're parked at the Gare de l'Est as sleepy-eyed Parisians hustle through the terminal on their way to work: We're planning to drive our two Hyundais more than 2000 miles east to Istanbul.
Read more at:
http://blogs.motortrend.com/6561705...-trail-of-the-orient-express-day-1/index.html
Daybreak, and we're parked outside the Gare de l'Est, one of six major railway stations that serve Paris. Nothing particularly unusual about that, perhaps, except for the cars we're driving -- a pair of California registered Hyundai Genesis sedans, both loaded 4.6-liter V-8s. We're a long way from Orange County, Toto. And we're about to go further.
The Gare de l'Est is where the famed Orient Express began its journey. We've all heard of the Orient Express -- it was featured in Bram Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula, and was the setting for Agatha Christie's 1934 thriller Murder on the Orient Express. James Bond rode it in From Russia With Love. It has become a pop culture icon.
The original Orient Express, inaugurated in October 1883, ran from Paris via Strasbourg, Munich, Vienna, Budapest, and then into Romania and Bulgaria before finishing in Istanbul, the ancient Turkish city where Europe literally meets Asia. Look at the route on a map and it screams road trip. Which is why we're parked at the Gare de l'Est as sleepy-eyed Parisians hustle through the terminal on their way to work: We're planning to drive our two Hyundais more than 2000 miles east to Istanbul.
Read more at:
http://blogs.motortrend.com/6561705...-trail-of-the-orient-express-day-1/index.html