This blisteringly green station wagon is just bristling with Oriental violence, fusing Asian malevolence with good old-fashioned European insanity…
“Whatcha gonna do with all that junk, all that junk inside your trunk?” We’re not totally sure what the Black Eyed Peas were banging on about in the bafflingly cretinous ‘My Humps’, but we can only assume that they were addressing an acquaintance who’d been deeply entrenched in the painstaking task of clearing out the loft, sorting and pruning and expunging until the boot of their car was full of superfluous items from their past.
So the natural answer to give the Black Eyed Peas in this instance would be “Oh, I’m just off to the tip. Is that a box of glass to be recycled? Yeah, I can take that for you. No, I’m not taking your food waste bin, it reeks.”
Unwarranted quizzing from shite rappers aside, this kind of endeavour is all just part of life when you own an estate car. Well, unless you’re Sander Op’t Root, that is. He’s the owner of this particular car, you see, and there are two important elements in his sphere of experience which exempt him from having annoying refuse-based badinage with terrible musicians: first of all, it’s a BMW, which means it’s not an estate – it’s a Touring. And secondly… well, just look at the bloody thing. This is clearly not a man who bought an estate car so that he could cart the lawn trimmings about or take advantage of the offers on home furnishings at Habitat.
So, as a seasoned car enthusiast at the tender age of 21, who’s previously stanced a bunch of Golfs and restored a Mini, why did Sander by himself a wagon?
“The Touring was brought into my work by a customer who was looking to get rid of it,” he explains. (Sander’s a mechanic by trade. Explains a few things.) “I took a look and liked what I saw, so I made an offer and a few days later it was accepted.”
So there you go, simple as that. He could see the potential, and in the twinkling of an eye Sander was set up to get out there and reframe the local population’s perceptions of who you could expect to see behind the wheel of a 3-Series estate.
Well, not quite. “The car wasn’t running, I had to drag it out of there,” he recalls. “It did start easily enough though, with a new battery and some fresh fluids. After a week of tinkering I had it running like clockwork – so the adventure could begin…”
It’s immediately obvious that this is a man with vision. Someone who would rather create his own bow-wave in the scene than bob and eddy in the turbulence of others. And inspiration for the first alteration came from his brother – or, more specifically, his brother’s car, a bagged Passat. Sander coveted that air-ride, he wanted it for himself. This wanton lust plunged him headfirst into the adventure he so yearned for right from the get-go, as air-ride is a) quite expensive to buy and b) not readily available for the E30 Touring, so the only realistic option was to fabricate a bespoke system.
Thankfully, Sander relishes this kind of thing, like a mad scientist after a boozy lunch. “I first set about finding some appropriate air-bags, and then sourced some valves that I thought would work well,” he explains (slightly manically, but all the more endearing for it). “After a bit of fabrication I got it all installed and working properly, and the acid test was to get out and try to drive it as low as possible. Which was a mistake, as it turned out, as the bags then fouled the wheels and split open. Everything broke.”
But this is all part of the fun, isn’t it? No-one ever said being a trailblazer was easy. Sander simply dialled a mate to tow him home, installed a new set of bags and this time fitted an electric valve regulator, and everything worked perfectly. Bit of trial-and-error, but it all turned out out lovely in the end.
“I took it to a bunch of tuning events, but the car wasn’t really getting the attention I thought it deserved, so I went back to drawing board,” Sander continues. “In the winter of 2017, I locked myself away in the garage to begin the car’s metamorphosis… the idea was to be wide, really wide, but also to be beautiful. So a bodykit was needed.”
As it turned out, it wasn’t just any bodykit that he had his eye on, but the much-revered and drooled-over Pandem kit – developed by Rocket Bunny for the E30 saloon, which Sander sought to cunningly rework to fit. While he was busy with the measuring tape, he also figured out that he’d be wanting some truly fat wheels to fill out the new corners, so he set about searching for such things on the interwebs. In due course, the ideal set was stumbled upon – a refreshingly wacky quartet of Carline 3-piece splits, rich in old-school Centerline-style shininess, and at 10.5-inches wide they seemed like they’d be girthsome enough to satisfy. However, after offering it all up it transpired that he’d need to go even wider – but nil desperandum, he simply grabbed a broader set of lips and rebuilt the wheels to be even meatier.
And so came the fitting of the bodykit. Something not for the faint of heart. “I procrastinated for days, because I knew that once you start grinding away at that metal there’s no way back,” he grins. But before long he couldn’t resist any more; Sander cracked out the power tools and got busy. After much trial-fitting, tweaking, metal trimming (not to mention helpful advice from his dad on sealing the bare metal so it wouldn’t rust under the new arches), he was eventually able to step back and gaze upon his magnificently loopy creation. Possibly the least sensible estate car the world has ever seen. The addition of the custom rear spoiler really adds to the lunacy; a unique setup by General Wheels, it was made-to-measure for the Touring and exudes a rich Touring Car vibe. Substantial-looking bit of kit, isn’t it?
“After many weeks of welding and grinding and polishing, over and over again, the entire Pandem was done and it was ready to go for its roadworthiness inspection,” he says. “There was a problem in that the regulations state the doors have to be able to be opened from both inside and outside, and of course the new rear arches cover up where the old door handles would have been. After a lot of thinking, I fitted some door-popper buttons under the wings so you can open them from outside.” Ingenious, huh? This bizarre car just keeps on serving up wonderful surprises.
“The interior’s also changed completely,” he goes on. “The front seats are from a Z3, while everything else inside was pulled out and restored before refitting; there’s a totally new audio system too.”
By this point it was approaching springtime and the car was crying out for some paint, or a wrap, or something. A lot of prep-work and fastidious finishing had taken place to perfect the bodywork, and Sander felt it was high time he paid a visit to WrapJunkies to transform his grey Touring into something more appropriate to the fresh lunacy of the reworked body. Et voila – now it’s ludicrously green.
“You don’t see a lot of E30 Tourings at car shows,” Sander ponders, eyeballing his meisterwerk with the expression of someone who’s sown the wind and just realised he now has to reap the whirlwind. And he’s right, you don’t, and you’ll never, ever see one as mad as this.
As the perennially befuddling Black Eyed Peas would put it, “I’ma get get get get you drunk, get you love-drunk off my hump.” And no, we’ve got no idea what that means either, but it’s approximately as mental as this E30 Touring, so the coda works just fine.
TECH SPEC PANDEM BMW E30 TOURING
Styling:
Pandem widebody kit, custom green wrap, custom General Wheels rear spoiler, E36 front splitter with M3 lip
Tuning:
M50B25 2.5-litre straight-six, custom exhaust manifold and 3” exhaust system, 5-speed manual
Chassis:
18” Carline 3-piece split-rims, 245/35 Toyo T1-R tyres, home-made custom air-ride setup
Interior:
Z3 front seats, QSP steering wheel, MTX component speakers and amp, 2x 10” Ascendant Audio subwoofers with 3500rms amp
Thanks:
Byba Kits, WrapJunkies / Sten Bosch, General Wheels, and Marco Op’t Root
Words Dan Bevis Photography Ronald Veth