The Nissan Skyline GT-R debuted in 1989. Once nicknamed “Godzilla,” it’s regarded as one of the greatest performance cars ever made. For 25 years, it was perhaps the juiciest of the forbidden fruits in the American car market, accessible only in video games.
While you can now import a Skyline GT-R into the States and drive it wherever you want, it’s not quite the same as experiencing a new one. Nissan now has a way to do that…but it will cost you.
As spotted by Autoblog, Nissan will follow the example of manufacturers like Mercedes-Benz and Land Rover by launching a Skyline GT-R restoration program through its in-house tuner NISMO in Japan.

The process is painstaking. NISMO strips the car down to its bare metal, testing the chassis for imperfections with laser precision and protects it against rust. NISMO disassembles and rebuilds the engine and drivetrain, refurbishing or replacing each part as needed. NISMO can also upgrade the engine with its performance parts. They deep clean the original interior or replace it with modern, more fire-resistant materials from the current GT-R.
The car won’t just look perfect, either. A NISMO test driver shakes it down on a Nissan test course, checking a list of variables to make sure it feels right. The result, which can take six months to a year, is a better-than-factory-new vintageNissan Skyline GT-R.