Land Rover just dropped a quarter-million-dollar love letter to Park City’s mountain culture, limiting production to three hand-built units that cost more than most people’s houses. The 2026 Range Rover Sport SV Winter Dusk Edition debuted at the invitation-only Range Rover House during March’s peak ski season, where Utah’s indigo twilight skies inspired every curve and accent.
Alpine-Inspired Engineering Meets Utah’s Landscape
Technical mastery channels mountain aesthetics into 626-horsepower luxury.
This isn’t your typical limited edition with special floor mats. The Winter Dusk Edition translates Utah’s alpine dusk into automotive language—Indigo Blue Satin paint shifts hues like mountain shadows, while Nano Yellow pinstripes and brake calipers echo sunset alpenglow.
The 4.4-liter twin-turbocharged V8 delivers 626 horsepower and rockets from zero to 60 mph in 3.6 seconds, but the real innovation lies in the 6D Dynamics suspension system that handles Park City’s elevation changes with hydraulic precision.
Inside, Body and Soul Seats use AI-driven transducers to create haptic audio vibrations—essentially massaging you while Beethoven plays through the premium sound system. Land Rover even includes custom Bomber skis, bindings, and ski bags because apparently spending $240,000 on a vehicle means never buying your own equipment again.
Exclusivity Meets Alpine Culture
Park City’s luxury retreat model redefines automotive launches.
Range Rover House Park City operates as an invitation-only luxury retreat at 675 Main Street, transforming vehicle launches into destination experiences. This marks the eighth U.S. special edition from Land Rover’s SV Bespoke program over four years, following nature-themed releases like the Carmel Edition and Asilomar variants.
The Winter Dusk Edition proceeds support Park City’s SOS Outreach youth programs, adding charitable purpose to automotive excess. The alpine luxury positioning reflects growing demand among ultra-high-net-worth individuals who treat cars as lifestyle accessories rather than mere transportation.
For the three buyers securing these vehicles during the March 6-15 Park City event, ownership extends beyond transportation into cultural capital—owning something that fewer people can access than original Basquiat paintings.

























