Poging GOUD - Vrij

Supercar Scrapyard

Auto Express

|

June 27, 2018

We visit a breaker with a difference, stripping damaged wrecks of high-performance icons and selling their parts all over the world

- Martin Saarinen

Supercar Scrapyard

YOU can spot them from a long way away: the mangled tops and bodies of Porsches, Ferraris and even a bright-green Lamborghini Gallardo. They sit up high on large, metal storage shelves, stacked neatly on top of one another with several columns reaching high into the sky. Drive further along the industrial estate in Wigan, Greater Manchester, and you’ll reach the front gate of Douglas Valley Breakers.

Step inside the compound and you’re greeted by one of the country’s biggest scrap and salvage yards for supercars. Or to put it another way, the final resting place for some of the greatest high-performance and luxury vehicles.

Crash your Porsche, Ferrari, TVR, Lotus, Aston Martin or anything that’s fast and interesting, and chances are that if the car is written off, it will end up at Douglas Valley Breakers. “Cars are classed into different categories when they are written off,” explains Graeme Cook, a member of the sales team. “Category A has to be scrapped, B cannot be put on the road but can be salvaged for parts and so on.

“We buy these cars, bidding against thousands of people at auctions across the UK, get them on site and strip them for parts that we then sell onwards.”

In other words, Douglas Valley Breakers isn’t just a resting place for these iconic cars; it’s also a donor centre that, according Cook, sells parts to customers with supercars all over the world.

Popular

There are hundreds of cars at Douglas Valley, but it’s easy to spot the most popular model: the Porsche Boxster. There are stacks and rows of them, from various years and in various states. Some look as if they only need a new front bumper to be back on the road, while others are barely recognisable.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Auto Express

Auto Express

Auto Express

China bans retractable and flushfitting door handles in safety fears

RETRACTABLE and flush-fitting door handles will be banned in China from 1 January 2027, prompted by safety concerns over occupants not being able to exit a vehicle in an emergency.

time to read

1 min

February 11, 2026

Auto Express

Auto Express

AUTO EXPRESS PERFECT SPEC

How we would option up four of the country's most popular new models

time to read

2 mins

February 11, 2026

Auto Express

Auto Express

Ioniq 3 seen testing ahead of April reveal

HYUNDAI is stepping into a new segment with the upcoming loniq 3, which we've spied ahead of its unveiling in April.

time to read

1 mins

February 11, 2026

Auto Express

Auto Express

Some Chinese brands are doomed to disappear, warns Skoda boss

Marketing chief Martin Jahn reckons the number of marques is not sustainable

time to read

2 mins

February 11, 2026

Auto Express

Auto Express

SCOOP YARIS TO SPREAD BETS ACROSS HEV AND EV

Fifth generation of Toyota's popular supermini will be offered with internal-combustion, hybrid and electric powertrains to suit buyers' needs

time to read

4 mins

February 11, 2026

Auto Express

Auto Express

USED BUYER'S GUIDE Range Rover Mk5

FROM £65,000 When it comes to high-end luxury and peerless off-road capability, there isn't much that can hold a candle to the fifth-generation Range Rover

time to read

5 mins

February 11, 2026

Auto Express

Auto Express

New Mitsubishi Shogun has its sights set on Discovery

SIX years after the firm announced that it was leaving the UK new-car market, Mitsubishi is poised to make a sensational return - and one of the first models it could bring here is this: the next-generation Shogun.

time to read

1 mins

February 11, 2026

Auto Express

Auto Express

DRIVER POWER

OWNER VIEWS ON THE UK'S BEST CARS

time to read

2 mins

February 11, 2026

Auto Express

Auto Express

MINI JCW

SINCE the JCW arrived on our fleet, MINI has upped the price from £31,200 to £33,530.

time to read

1 min

February 11, 2026

Auto Express

Auto Express

Kona Electric is first Hyundai to qualify for grant

THE Hyundai Kona has become the Korean brand's first model to receive the Government's Electric Car Grant, ensuring savings for buyers, as well as users of the Motability scheme.

time to read

1 min

February 11, 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size