A single example of the Lamborghini Urus has left Mansory with so many visible changes that the original shape almost fades into the background. The project carries the name Venatus EVO S, and the tuner describes the vehicle as a bespoke one-off.
Images released online by the tuner show the SUV from several angles, with attention placed on body additions across nearly every section. The widebody package introduces extended fender flares on both axles. New side skirts connect those broader sections, while the front receives a fresh hood, vented front fenders, Y-shaped daytime running lights, added pieces around the bumper, and a lower lip finished as a separate element.

The mirrors come from Mansory’s own catalog and carry star graphics across the housing. The same motif appears elsewhere on the body, enough times to define the visual theme. At the rear, the tuner chose two wings instead of one. A diffuser with a large center opening surrounds the centrally mounted exhaust outlets, and the area between the taillights displays the Mansory script in clear view. The rear hatch also carries another logo, with extra emblems spread around the vehicle.

Paint treatment changes tone from blue into black across the body. Forged carbon details appear in several exterior sections, and a fresh wheel design completes the package. Suspension height also drops, giving the SUV a lower stance than the factory version.
Inside, the color direction stays consistent. Light blue leather covers most surfaces, joined by black trim sections placed for contrast. Mansory logos appear across the cabin, including the seats and other upholstered areas. Black piping runs through the interior, together with glossy black accents and carbon fiber trim pieces. The cabin layout stays familiar, though the material mix shifts sharply from standard factory trim.

The tuner states output reaches 900 metric horsepower, listed as 662 kW or 887 hp. Torque rises to 1,100 Nm, equal to 811 lb-ft. Mansory does not specify whether this example uses an automatic or a manual transmission.
The vehicle carries the full Venatus EVO S name, and the tuner presents the build as one individual commission rather than part of a larger run. That detail fits the rest of the package. Almost every visible panel carries an intervention, and every surface appears chosen to make the SUV impossible to mistake for a standard Urus.
For Mansory, subtle work never entered the plan here. This one goes in the opposite direction and stays there.
Lamborghini Urus by Mansory – Photo Gallery




















