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Moonlighting on Downsideupdesign... Geneva auto show Podcast #1

Still not had your fill of this year's Geneva auto show? Well then why not head over to Drew Smith's downsideupdesign blog, where you'll find me guesting on their first podcast, in which Drew and myself disect the design and strategy behind Geneva's most important production debuts (and at times, that disection perhaps comes closer to vivisection...don't say we didn't warn you!)

Click on the screen grab below to head through to downsideup's site, or here to go direct to the video on blip.tv

DSU With thanks to Drew for conducting the podcast, and putting in all the edit time...Check back soon if you'd like to see us rake over some hot coals in the form of Geneva's concept cars.

Posted by Joseph Simpson on 11th March 2010

March 11, 2010 in Analysis, Aston Matin, Audi, Auto, autoshows, Design, Drew Smith, Geneva, Launches, luxury, Materials, Video, VW | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Geneva auto show 2010 - some things you might have missed...

By now, you'll no doubt have read all about the cars and concepts that you were interested in at last week's Geneva auto show. But if you've still apetite to digest and cogitate, Drew Smith - of the Downsideupdesign blog - and myself are producing a two part podcast with pics to cover all of the major production debuts and concepts, which you'll be able to see/hear in the next few days. For now though, you might be interested in some of the details, elements and irreverant bits and bats that I noticed in the Palexpo last week. So without further ado...

IMG_4124

Citroen reimagined the ReVolt from Frankfurt as a racer for the road in the form of the SurVolt (above). Only Citroen could get away with painting it gloss blue, matte grey, pink and orange. But they did. Note these graphics - they were quite fun, a play on PCBs - used to signify the electric drivetrain.

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Meanwhile over at Mercedes (above), they'd got wood... (sorry, couldn't resist). The use of wood laminates in this interior was fantastic - it vied with the Pegueot (see below) for concept interior of the show, and previews an altogether more 'light of touch' future Mercedes interior design language...

IMG_4153

Peugeot marked its return to form with the SR1 (although special note to the glorious bike also on the stand) - which previews the brand's altogether more acceptable new face (thank god the rictus grin's gone). But it was the interior that really stood out in this car...great work Julien et al:

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Speaking of gorgeous things, here's a shot of the superb little Pininfarina Alfa Duettotanta that makes me go a little bit weak at the knees...

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Continue reading "Geneva auto show 2010 - some things you might have missed..." »

March 09, 2010 in Analysis, Aston Matin, Audi, Auto, autoshows, Citroen, Design, Designers, Drew Smith, Geneva, Honda, Juke, Materials, Mercedes, Nissan, Observations, Peugeot, Photos, Podcasts, Porsche, Toyota, VW | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Frankfurt in four minutes - IAA 2009 review video

Frankfurt auto show is so huge that, even having spent three days there, it's hard to cover everything that's in the halls of the Messe. So here's a fairly personalised view of the 2009 Frankfurt auto show, edited into just four minutes. There are things in here that will doubtless seem strange to you, and there are plenty of interesting things missing - simply becasue I didn't get time to video them, but hopefully you'll enjoy and get a flavour of what it was like to be there. Note, if you click through and run this in Youtube, you can watch it in HD too.

Just in case you watched it and are intrigued as to what certain things are, then in rough order from the top that was:

BMW's Vision Efficient Dynamics concept, The Mercedes Gullwing (nee SLS), the original Smart concept from 1994, Aston's Rapide, Ford of Europe's CEO John Fleming, Renault Nissan CEO Carlos Gohsn, the Renault Twizy, Joe Paluska of Better Place, Better Place's battery swap system, Mini's (loud) birthday celebrations, details of various cars  and concepts - BMW, Citroen, Renault, Aston, the fold away seat in the Ford Grand C-Max, Mark getting annoyed at being filmed, Stefan Lamm - Ford of Europe's exterior design director, talking about touch screen HMI influences, BMW's touch screen concept Apps store, the HMI in the Hyundai iX Metro concept, and finally Drew Smith enjoying saving the environment...

More video and thoughts from Frankfurt are on their way. Check back soon...

Posted by Joseph Simpson on 18th September 2009

September 18, 2009 in Aston Matin, Auto, autoshows, BMW, Citroen, Design, Drew Smith, Events and debates, EVs, Frankfurt, Mercedes, Renault, User Interface, Video | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

The last 12 months of auto design - Joe's favourite things

I returned from France a few days ago to find Robb and Mark discussing the last 12 months of cars and car design, because they were thinking about which ones ought to be entered into the upcoming Spark design Awards.

While the auto industry’s been in the doldrums for some time now, Spark Awards provides an opportune moment to take a look at some of the more interesting cars, concepts and automotive details of recent times. So without further ado, here’s a scratch list of some Simpson favourites…


BMW Gina

Gina

Designed years ago, but then dumped in a secret hanger until such time when BMW needed an on-demand concept to unveil (the opening of BMW-Welt proved to be just such an occasion), BMW’s Gina is arguably the single most innovative thing to have happened in auto design for years. As its mastermind Chris Bangle remarked at unveiling “what do we need the skin of a car for anyway? What is it made out of? Does it have to be made of metal?” Too few ‘what if’ questions are asked in the auto world, and the moments that they do happen are typically hidden from public view – as this one was for so long. But we’re glad it finally saw the light of day, and that like all the best concepts it asks more questions than it answers.


Nissan Cube

Cube

In a world where even family hatchbacks are competing to set the fastest time in the class around the Nurburgring, Nissan offers a leftfield approach. The Cube has been around in Japan for years, but now Europe and the US are getting the second generation. Why? Nissan realise that most drivers aren’t interested in the minutae of cornering finesse, or top speed; they’re interested in something that manages to provide huge utility, but have personality at the same time. The Cube has both in spades. Essentially a box-on-wheels, it features a ‘sun and moon’ set of dials, ‘curvy wave’ seating, and asymmetric styling in the shape of one side rear window turning around the corner into the rear windshield. When he had one on test recently, Michael Banovsky noted “I feel awful leaving the cube downstairs at night. He looks so sad”. It’s the kind of car that elicits such feelings. Jean Jennings, Automobile Magazine and long-time Spark friend, raved about it to us recently, too.

 

Audi LED lights

A5

They’re by no means universally loved, nor were Audi first to introduce LED headlight technology, but through smart design strategy and brilliant detailed execution, Audi have taken ownership of the LED headlight. Subtly different on the R8, A6, A5 and A4, the wavy bands of bright white lights, piercing through the daylight when in DRL mode, are now as much an Audi identification hallmark as the shield grille and four rings - leaving you in no doubt as to just which type of car is behind you, and would like you to move over, thank you very much…

Continue reading "The last 12 months of auto design - Joe's favourite things" »

August 19, 2009 in Analysis, Aston Matin, Audi, Auto, BMW, Design, Designers, EVs, Ford, Fusion Hybrid, Honda, Hybrids, Ideo, Insight, Photos, Sustainability, Technology, Toyota, Volvo | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Aston Martin's Cygnet: Reinventing Toyota's iQ as an ugly duckling?

Cygnet AstoniQ As the world wakes up to news that Aston Martin next year plans to offer its existing customers an Aston-ised, tricked-out Toyota iQ to complement their purchase of that Vantage/DB9/DBS, you'll doubtless be able to read truck-loads of alternately fawning and cynical views from the automotive blogosphere over the course of the next few days.

I'm wussing out, and won't proffer too much opinion on the car's design here - you can make your own mind up on whether grafting an Aston face onto a city car works, and whether it is a vehicle that has appeal. But it's worth delving just a little deeper into the idea here.

Aston realise that lots of its customers own a small city car - such as the Smart or iQ, alongside their DB9, Vantage, etc. That's what designer Marek Reichman told me a few years back, and it's a market that Dr. Ulrich Bez - CEO of Aston Martin - has seen fit to exploit here.

From a size and environmental perspective, the Cygnet serves as an interesing counter-weight to the badly-received Lagonda SUV concept from Geneva. Yet in terms of the thinking behind it, it feels no less cynical.

On first impressions, Aston are not being unreasonable by believing that its customers could easily spend an extra £10k or so over the regular price of that second-car Smart/iQ they put in their garage. What's more, for something that has a bespoke feel and will be rare, they believe they'll jump at the chance.

AML Geneva

Such thinking stacks up on paper, but being that it's only planning to sell these to existing customers, my initial take would be that Aston may be mis-judging the market and its brand. That's because the customer who keeps both a Vantage and a Smart in the garage tends to be fairly sophisticated, intelligent and not overly-flashy. The reason they have a Smart isn't just for its city-friendly proportions, but for those moments when one needs to keep quiet about the size of one's back account, fly beneath the radar or blend into the crowd to appear classless and ordinary. Nothing says classless more than a Smart car. And in my book, nothing will say clueless, and "I have more money than sense, look at me" more than turning up in a Aston-detailed £20k Japanese city car.

Clearly, Aston believe I'm wrong. The non-auto nerd won't notice, they'd argue - seeing it as just another iQ at a glance, thus leaving driver and the automotive congniscenti to revel in its specialness - which is surely half the point of the Aston Martin brand. Yet I can't help feeling that this vehicle, while an interesting project for the Gaydon team to be working on right now, says much about the deeply cynical thinking of the people running Aston Martin today, which makes the whole affair seem rather ugly.

Images: iQ/Cygnet - Toyota GB PR, Lagonda Concept - Drew Smith

Posted by Joseph Simpson on 29th June 2009

June 29, 2009 in Aston Matin, Auto, Design, Toyota | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)

Tata Nano: the dawn of a new automotive era?

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Take note of today's date, because Tata officially put on sale its revolutionary Nano car earlier, and it may well change the automotive and wider-world landscape. The £1350, or '1 Lakh' vehicle has been heralded as a development to transform the lives of millions, by opening up access to personal mobility for many in the developing world who up until now have largely been denied it.

It's very easy to be critical of this. Environmentalists have, and will continue to warn that the Nano constitutes nothing more than a complete environmental disaster for the planet. However, this is somewhat rich coming from western critics who for years have taken personal urban mobility for granted. I recently discussed my views on the Nano in a Q&A follow up to the Geneva auto show, with Daniel Gray who runs MPGomatic.com. Playing devil's advocate, Daniel asked of me:

"The $2500 Tata has captured the imagination of many. It would seem that a mass-produced vehicle at this remarkable price point could offer mobility to millions, at the sacrifice of safety and air quality. Is the cost to society worth it?"

To which - I still think it's worth repeating, my answer runs as follows:

"There are two ways of looking at the Nano question. You can either say that opening up car ownership and mobility to millions more will prove nothing more than a societal and environmental disaster. Or the other way of looking at it (which I favour) is to say this: The car was designed to overcome the carnage that occurs on India’s roads every day. Entire families, traveling as one on motorcycles - are killed in (mainly low speed) accidents. The Nano’s never going to receive 5 stars in a crash test, but Indian road conditions are so different that it is questionable how relevant a measure this is. So in the low speed accidents which are most common, the Nano may actually ’save’ lives, because it will protect its occupants, who would otherwise have been traveling, unprotected, on motorcycles.

In terms of emissions, it apparently has better fuel economy than the Prius that is about to be replaced, so they’re not that far off the mark, efficiency-wise. What we need to hope and encourage to happen, is for developing country’s transport fleets, to leap-frog to future propulsion technologies such as compressed air, electric or even hydrogen, very quickly for their vehicles. The big question is whether the world can truly cope with millions of more cars. Unfortunately, that’s a question all of us need to ask. And until we find new, better, innovative ways to move about in the developed world, we’re going to struggle to impress our hopes and fears on the developing one."

Since the Geneva auto show, future-positive automotive news has been more than a little hard to come by. Instead we've done things like become obsessed with what a clanger Aston Martin dropped with its new Lagonda SUV concept. While the Lagonda and the Nano bear no direct comparison and will rarely be mentioned in the same sentence, it's worth stopping to consider them as representative of two very disparate slices of automotive thinking right now. Perhaps picking up on the flack they received right from the get-go about the Lagonda, Aston's team were quick to stress that the Lagonda was primarily pitched at developing markets (like India). Their logic appears to be that SUVs are beloved of the middle classes and oligarchs who live in such regions, often because the roads are in such poor condition - so greater ride height and four-wheel drive are a must. As presumably, is the ability to make potholes bigger, and to further erode away loosely made dirt roads, which 4x4s tend to do. Clearly, enforcing a 'them and us' societal imbalance has nothing to do with it...

DSC05936 the Lagonda SUV concept in the Geneva auto salon 2009... draw your own conclusions

I don't need to state the obvious here, but in many ways what the Lagonda embodies represents something very ugly about how certain sections of the automotive industry currently go about their business. The Nano, for all its critics, reduces the very essence of what a car is to its constituent parts. Protection from the elements, ability to carry bodies and goods at a speed faster than possible on bike or foot, while taking less human effort, and a means of directly connecting two geographically discrete locations. The Nano should merely be to the Asian sub-continent what the Mini, 500, Beetle and 2CV were to Europe last century, and the Model-T Ford was right at the beginning of it in the US too. Many will say that this makes it a bad thing. I'd caution that we should look beyond simplistic and single-viewpoint environmental assessments before jumping to that conclusion.

It may yet prove to be a vehicle the world is unable to sustain in an ecological sense, but by creating access to the fundamentals of automobility for new echelons of society, it could prove to be the most important car of this decade, maybe even the century. Somehow I suspect the Lagonda will be remembered for altogether different reasons.

Posted by Joseph Simpson on 23rd March 2009

Lagonda image kindly provided by Drew Smith. Nano image: Joseph Simpson

March 23, 2009 in Analysis, Aston Matin, Auto, autoshows, Design, India, Lagonda, markets, Nano, Sustainability, Tata | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

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