This BMW Z4 wears a wide-body aero kit designed by Duke Dynamics and manufactured by CMST, built mostly from FRP with carbon-fibre options on the lips and bonnet. It targets the E89 Z4 โ the second-generation roadster that replaced the Z3 โ and transforms its long-bonnet, short-tail proportions into an aggressive, low-slung mini-widebody. The kit includes a front bumper, side skirts, rear bumper, front lip, rear lip, front and rear fenders, bonnet and boot lid, with the fenders flaring the arches to sit the wheels flush with the bodywork.
- Vehicle: BMW Z4 (E89, 2009โ2016 roadster with retractable hardtop)
- Design / manufacture: styling by Duke Dynamics (Canada); tooling and production by CMST
- Materials: FRP for bumpers, skirts, fenders and boot; carbon fibre or FRP for front and rear lips; FRP-and-carbon bonnet
- Key pieces: front + rear bumpers, front + rear lips, side skirts, wide front + rear fenders, vented bonnet, raised boot lid
- Effect: mini-widebody stance, lower visual ride height, vented arches and bonnet
A modern classic, given a wide-body attitude
The E89 Z4 has always traded on its silhouette: a long bonnet and a short, clipped tail that give it a classic front-engine roadster look, helped by the folding hard top that cleans up the rear deck. This kit leans into that drama rather than smoothing it out. Duke Dynamics drew the styling and CMST produced the moulds and panels, and the partnership shows in the way the bodywork stays cohesive โ the source notes that the tidy fit owes as much to CMST's data and tooling accuracy as to the design itself. The point of a wide-body kit like this is fit: flared arches only look right when the panel transitions are clean and the wheels fill them, and that comes down to mould precision.
Piece-by-piece breakdown
Front bumper and lip
The front bumper reshapes the Z4's face into something predatory, working with the factory headlights to sharpen the car's expression. Below it sits a deep front lip โ available in carbon fibre or FRP โ that drops almost to the road for an exaggerated low stance. Beyond the look, that lower front edge helps manage airflow at the nose. The lip is one of the few pieces offered in carbon, so owners who want the wide-body silhouette but a lighter, exposed-weave front edge can specify it.
Wide fenders and side skirts
The four wide fenders are the heart of the kit. Front and rear, they flare the arches outward to create a mini-widebody, bringing the wheels and tyres out to sit flush with the bodywork and giving the Z4 a planted, muscular footprint. Vent openings in the fenders add individuality and let air escape the arches. The side skirts tie the flares together with raised ridges that echo the car's waistline, lowering the visual centre of gravity and giving the profile its concave-convex shape.
Rear bumper, lip and boot lid
At the back the rear bumper is heavily sculpted, with the muscular, undulating shape the source describes as athletic. The rear lip carries ventilation channels that improve both the look and the function, helping under-car air exit cleanly. The reshaped boot lid adds an outward-kicked lip that works with the folding-roof deck โ a detail that, again, only sits right because the panel was tooled to match the car precisely.
Vented bonnet
The bonnet is built in FRP with carbon detailing and adds vent openings that improve engine-bay heat extraction. The carbon vent inserts are lighter than the surrounding panel and add visual contrast, and the venting helps the engine breathe and cool โ a practical addition on a tightly packaged roadster.
FRP vs carbon fibre: understanding the materials
This is primarily an FRP (fibreglass-reinforced plastic) kit, with carbon available on the lips and used as detailing on the bonnet. The two materials suit different priorities. FRP is strong, easy to repair and considerably more affordable, which makes it the sensible choice for large wide-body panels like bumpers and fenders that take road knocks and need painting to body colour anyway. Carbon fibre is lighter and offers exposed-weave aesthetics, which is why it is offered on the lips โ the parts most likely to be shown off in their raw finish. For a street wide-body build, FRP panels painted to match, with a carbon front lip, is a popular and cost-effective combination.
| Property | FRP (fibreglass) | Carbon fibre |
|---|---|---|
| Weight | Heavier | Lighter |
| Cost | Lower | Higher |
| Repairability | Easy | Specialist |
| Typical finish | Painted to body colour | Exposed weave or painted |
| Best used for | Large bumpers and fenders | Lips and accent pieces |
Fitment and finish in Australia
Wide-body kits ask more of the fitting process than bolt-on lips, so professional fitment is strongly recommended. The fenders need careful alignment to flow into the doors and bumpers, the wheels and tyres must be sized and offset to fill the new arches without rubbing, and FRP panels typically need preparation and paint before fitting. Budget for wheel fitment and a proper respray to body colour as part of the project. Once on, an FRP wide-body Z4 is a striking, low-volume build that stands apart from a standard roadster.
Explore options in our BMW Body Kit collection, see the broader carbon and aero range under CMST Body Kit for BMW and All Body Kit, and read about the manufacturer on the CMST page.
FAQ
Which Z4 does this wide-body kit fit?
It is designed for the E89 BMW Z4 (2009โ2016), the second-generation roadster with the retractable hardtop. It does not fit the earlier E85/E86 Z4 or the newer G29 Z4, which have different bodies.
Is the kit carbon fibre or FRP?
Mostly FRP. The bumpers, side skirts, fenders and boot lid are FRP; the front and rear lips are available in carbon fibre or FRP; and the bonnet is FRP with carbon detailing. FRP keeps the large wide-body panels affordable and repairable, while carbon is offered where exposed weave makes sense.
Will I need different wheels or tyres for the wide fenders?
Usually, yes. The flared fenders are designed to be filled by wider wheels and tyres with the correct offset. Plan wheel fitment alongside the kit so the tyres sit flush within the arches without rubbing โ getting the offset right is key to the wide-body look.
Do the FRP panels come painted?
No. FRP panels are supplied in primer-ready raw finish and need preparation and painting to your body colour before or during fitment. Factor a quality respray into your build budget so the panels match the rest of the car.
Can the kit be fitted at home?
A wide-body kit is an advanced installation. Fender alignment, panel-gap setting, wheel fitment and paint all need to be right for the result to look factory, so we recommend professional fitment by a body shop experienced with wide-body conversions rather than a driveway install.
Interested in a wide-body Z4 build? Browse fitment and finishes in our BMW Body Kit range and talk to the AME Motorsport team about specifying panels, wheels and paint.
