curated by GRRL! updated: January 25, 2026

Bio Excerpt: Alexia Parteni represents one of motorsports’ most persistent problems: a female racer whose name exists in the paddock but whose story has been lost to the documentation gap that plagues women’s racing careers. Unlike her male counterparts who get their Wikipedia pages while still in junior... (full bio below ↓↓)

Alexia Parteni

Rally racer

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Alexia's Details:

nickname:
Lexi
Birthday:
June 15, 2004 (21)
Birthplace:
Romania
racing type:
Rally racing
series:
team(s):
racing status:
Pro
height:
165cm
residence:
inspiration(s):
guilty pLEASURES:
FOLLOWING:
FACTIOD:
GRRL! Number:
GRRL-0332

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Alexia's full bio:

(last updated 2026-01-24

Alexia Parteni is a name that exists in the racing world, but her story remains largely unwritten in the digital record—a frustrating reality for too many women in motorsports whose careers deserve documentation but haven’t yet received it.

EARLY YEARS

The details of Parteni’s early life—where she was born, when she first fell in love with racing, who handed her the keys to her first kart—remain undocumented in publicly available sources. It’s the kind of information gap that’s all too common when researching female racers, even those actively competing. While male drivers often have their childhood karting days chronicled in exhaustive detail, women’s origin stories frequently go unrecorded until they’ve already proven themselves multiple times over.

OTHER INTERESTS

No information is currently available about Parteni’s interests outside the cockpit. Whether she’s into photography, speaks multiple languages, has a degree in engineering, or spends her off-weekends hiking—these are the personal details that make racers three-dimensional humans rather than just names on a timing sheet, and they remain undocumented.

EARLY SUCCESS

Parteni’s path through the racing ranks hasn’t been captured in the accessible historical record. The first wins, the breakthrough moments, the series where she cut her teeth—all of it exists somewhere, lived by her and witnessed by those who were trackside, but it hasn’t made its way into the kind of documentation that typically follows racing careers. It’s a reminder that motorsports history is still being written selectively, and women’s achievements often require deliberate effort to preserve.

NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS

No documented achievements are currently available in accessible sources.

INSPIRATIONS

Who inspired Alexia Parteni to go racing? Which drivers did she watch as a kid? What moment made her think, “I can do that”? These are questions without documented answers. Every racer has their heroes and their “why”—the people and moments that pushed them toward a career that demands everything. Parteni’s influences remain her own story to tell when the opportunity arises.

REPUTATION

Without accessible quotes from competitors, team principals, or media coverage, it’s impossible to paint an accurate picture of how Parteni is regarded in the paddock. Reputation is earned through consistent performance, professionalism, and the respect of peers—all things that happen in real time but don’t always get documented, especially for women whose careers may not receive the same media attention as their male counterparts.

FUTURE GOALS/PLANS

What’s next for Parteni remains undocumented in public sources. Every racer has ambitions—another championship, a jump to a higher series, a specific track they want to conquer—but without interviews or official announcements, these goals remain private.

A NOTE ON THE ARCHIVE

This profile represents something important: the acknowledgment that a woman named Alexia Parteni is part of motorsports, even when the digital archive hasn’t caught up with her story yet. It’s a placeholder, yes, but it’s also a statement. Women’s racing history is full of gaps—not because the achievements didn’t happen, but because they weren’t deemed worth recording at the time.

The racing world has a documentation problem. Male drivers get their Wikipedia pages while still in junior formulas. Their karting results are preserved. Their quotes are collected. Their careers are tracked from the moment someone decides they’re “one to watch.” For women, the bar for documentation is often much higher—and by the time they’ve cleared it, years of their story have already been lost.

This isn’t about Parteni specifically; it’s about the hundreds of women whose racing careers exist in memories, in old timing sheets, in boxes of photos, but not in the kind of searchable, accessible format that creates lasting historical record. The fact that you’re reading this—that Race Like a GRRL! has created a space for Parteni’s name even without a complete biography—is part of fixing that problem.

Every woman who has ever turned a wheel in competition deserves to have her story preserved. Some stories are easier to find than others. Some require detective work. Some are still being lived, still being built, with the best chapters yet to come. And some, like Parteni’s, are waiting for someone to ask the right questions, to dig a little deeper, to recognize that the absence of information isn’t the same as the absence of achievement.

The racing world is slowly getting better at this. Social media has helped, giving drivers direct control over their own narratives. Dedicated journalists and historians are working to fill in the gaps. Websites like this one are creating space for women’s names and stories, even the incomplete ones, because visibility matters. You can’t inspire the next generation if the current one remains invisible.

So here’s what we know about Alexia Parteni: she’s a racer. She’s competed in a world that still doesn’t make it easy for women. She’s part of a lineage of women in motorsports that stretches back more than a century, connecting her to everyone from María Teresa de Filippis to the teenage karters currently working their way up. She exists, she races, and her story matters—even if we’re still working on getting all the details down.

If you know Alexia Parteni—if you’ve raced with her, worked with her, or have access to her career information—we want to hear from you. This profile is a living document, ready to be updated the moment better information becomes available. That’s the point of Race Like a GRRL!: not just to celebrate the women whose stories are already well-documented, but to create space for everyone who belongs in the archive.

Because here’s the thing about motorsports history: it’s not just what happened. It’s what we choose to remember and record. For too long, women’s racing achievements have been treated as footnotes, if they were recorded at all. This website exists to change that, one profile at a time, even when—especially when—the information is hard to find.

Parteni’s story is out there somewhere: in race results, in team records, in the memories of people who’ve watched her drive. Getting it into the permanent record is the next step. Until then, her name is here, claiming her place in the archive, reminding us that the history of women in motorsports is bigger and more complex than the limited documentation suggests.

The fact that we don’t yet have all the details doesn’t mean she doesn’t count. It means we have work to do—work that this website is committed to doing, one racer at a time, until the archive reflects the reality: that women have always been part of racing, and they always will be.

References:

No specific sources were available for Alexia Parteni at the time of publication. This profile will be updated as verified information becomes available.