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The Laureato predates the Royal Oak by a year and gets far less credit for it. This 38mm steel reissue brings the original 1975 integrated-bracelet design back in a wearable modern package, powered by GP's own movement. It is one of the most underappreciated entries in the integrated-bracelet category.
Luigi Macaluso designed the original Laureato in 1975, giving Girard-Perregaux an integrated steel bracelet sport watch before the category had a name. The octagonal bezel was a deliberate design statement, distinct from the AP Royal Oak's porthole geometry yet equally bold for its time. The line was eventually retired as quartz and shifting tastes made steel sport watches a harder sell in the 1980s and 1990s.
GP revived the Laureato in 2016 for the brand's 225th anniversary, reintroducing it with in-house movements and updated case finishing. The 38mm reference sits at the accessible end of the modern range and is the closest thing to the spirit of the original.
The bracelet finishing on early production examples from 2016 and 2017 can show wear faster than expected on the brushed center links. Confirm the bracelet has not been polished by a jeweler, which destroys the alternating finish contrast. The clasp on the 38mm has been reported as slightly less refined than the 42mm version, so check engagement and play before buying.
The dial lacquer on some steel references picks up light differently depending on the angle, which photographs poorly but looks fine in person. Finally, verify the reference number carefully: 81005-11-431-11A is steel with a silver dial, and there are similar references with slightly different finishes that can be confused in secondary market listings.
The 38mm Laureato trades at a modest discount to retail on the secondary market, which is unusual for an in-house integrated-bracelet watch from a maison of this age. That gap exists primarily because GP does not have the same marketing pull as AP or PP, not because the watch is lesser. For a buyer who values movement quality and historical lineage over brand recognition, this is a genuine opportunity.
Prices have been stable rather than speculative, which makes it easier to buy at fair value.
The GP03300-0054 is a fully in-house automatic caliber with a 46-hour power reserve, serviced exclusively through Girard-Perregaux authorized service centers or qualified independent watchmakers with GP parts access. Service intervals are typically recommended at 5 to 7 years. Parts availability is good for a watch still in current production.
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The octagonal bezel finishing is the fastest authentication check on any Laureato.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| case | Octagonal bezel brushed-to-polished transitions | Crisp right-angle edges where brushed flanks meet polished top surfaces on each octagonal facet | Rounded or blended transitions; softened edges from buffing or repolishing |
| bracelet | Integrated bracelet seating at lug interface | Bracelet meets the case with zero gap and no lateral movement; links are Girard-Perregaux signed | Any gap at the lug interface or lateral play; unsigned or aftermarket end-links |
| caseback | Exhibition caseback showing Cal. GP03300-0054 | GP-decorated bridges visible; movement text includes GP caliber designation | Non-GP movement visible; solid caseback substituted for exhibition caseback |