Hidden in a quiet Minnesota outbuilding, two Ferrari 308 GTBs and a DeLorean DMC-12 have emerged in the kind of preserved condition that collectors usually only dream about. The trio, tucked away for decades, bridges European exotica and 1980s pop‑culture fantasy in a single, dust‑covered snapshot of automotive history.
The discovery has quickly become a touchstone for enthusiasts because it combines rarity, originality, and an unusually complete story of long-term storage. Instead of the usual tale of decay and neglect, the Minnesota garage has revealed cars that appear remarkably intact, inviting both forensic curiosity and market speculation.

The Minnesota garage that time forgot
The story begins with a nondescript structure in Minnesota that had quietly sheltered three icons from the late 1970s and early 1980s. Inside, two Ferrari 308 GTBs sat alongside a DeLorean DMC-12, all of them coated in storage dust yet showing the kind of straight bodywork and complete interiors that suggest careful, if distant, stewardship. Reporting on the find describes the Ferraris as “legendary” examples and notes that pairing them with a DeLorean in a single private stash is a truly uncommon accomplishment for any enthusiast in Minnesota.
What sets this cache apart is not just the model mix but the condition. Barn finds often surface as half-complete projects, yet these cars appear largely intact, with trim, glass, and major mechanical components present and restorable. Coverage of the discovery highlights that the two Ferrari 308 GTBs are part of the revered “308 G” lineage, a detail that matters to collectors who track chassis codes and production nuances, and it underscores that the DeLorean is a genuine DMC-12 from the original DMC era rather than a later replica or kit.
Two Ferrari 308 GTBs with a 30‑year mystery
The twin Ferrari 308 GTBs are the emotional core of the find, because they represent a model that helped define the brand’s road‑car identity in the late 1970s. According to detailed coverage, the pair had effectively been abandoned in a private garage for roughly three decades, a span long enough that many similar cars would have succumbed to rust, rodents, or piecemeal parting out. One report describes how someone left two Ferrari 308s in a garage for 30 years, then contrasts the usual sadness of such neglect with the uplifting reveal when the doors finally opened on these Ferrari 308 survivors.
The 308 GTB has long been a gateway into classic Ferrari ownership, but the “308 G” designation cited in the reporting signals a specific configuration that enthusiasts track closely. Both cars appear to retain their original bodywork and key mechanical components, which significantly boosts their appeal as restoration candidates rather than parts donors. Coverage of the discovery, published on Nov 27, 2025, emphasizes that finding not one but two such Ferraris in a single garage, still together after decades, is rare enough to shift how collectors think about long‑term storage and the potential upside of forgotten exotics that have quietly sat untouched since Nov 27, 2025 era reporting brought this case to light.
A DeLorean DMC-12 that looks ready for its close‑up
Sharing the space with the Ferraris, the DeLorean DMC-12 adds a different kind of star power. While the 308 GTB is a purebred Italian sports car, the stainless‑steel DeLorean is an American‑Irish curiosity that owes much of its fame to film and television. In the Minnesota garage, the DMC-12 appears to have aged more gracefully than many of its peers, which often suffer from corrosion around the frame and tired interiors after years of neglect. The reporting on the find stresses that this particular DeLorean is a bona fide DMC example, not a movie prop or tribute build, which makes its preserved state especially notable.
Visual documentation of the discovery shows the DeLorean’s signature gullwing doors, brushed metal panels, and period‑correct wheels still in place, suggesting that the car was parked rather than dismantled. Enthusiasts who have followed the story point out that a solid DMC-12 can be more challenging to source than its pop‑culture profile might imply, because production numbers were limited and many cars were driven hard in the decades after release. The Minnesota car, by contrast, appears to have been spared that fate, emerging as a relatively complete time capsule that now stands shoulder to shoulder with the two Ferrari 308 GTBs in the same Minnesota garage.
How a viral detailing crew turned a quiet stash into a global spectacle
The world did not learn about this garage through an auction listing or a dealer leak, but through a detailing crew that has built a following by reviving long‑dormant cars on camera. Earlier in the week of the reveal, the team behind WD Detailing teased the discovery in a social post that declared, “Well…. THE SECRET IS OUT!” and hinted that they had found two Ferraris and a DeLorean, a message that appeared on a Home feed on Nov 25, 2025. That early glimpse primed their audience for a full video, which would walk viewers through the dust, cobwebs, and careful cleaning that gradually revealed the cars’ true condition.
The subsequent video coverage, hosted on a widely viewed YouTube channel, transformed a local curiosity into an international talking point among car fans. Viewers watched in real time as the Ferraris’ red paint and the DeLorean’s stainless finish emerged from decades of grime, illustrating how professional detailing can dramatically change first impressions of a barn find. Additional written reporting, published on Nov 27, 2025, contextualized the footage by explaining that the two Ferrari 308 GTBs and the DeLorean DMC-12 had been hidden in a Minnesota garage for roughly 30 years, and it echoed the earlier sentiment that “When an exotic car is left forgotten in a garage for years, it is usually a sad story. But” in this case the rediscovery turned into an uplifting reveal for Nov readers.
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