Posts Tagged ‘Design’

Doodlings to Design

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011

Stumbled across these appealing little line drawings, taken for an early 1960s design study for NSU’s Autonova GT (the manufac­turer that would fuse with Auto Union before becoming Audi).

They instantly bought to mind that little-​​boy fascin­ation that we have always had for cars.

There are few of you readers out there, we imagine, who didn’t sketch cars and motor­bikes back in the mists of childhood. pre-​​adolescent doodlings are some of the first steps, we reckon, toward the projection of freedom in the imagin­ation of little children.

They empower the realisation that design and creativity can lead to a certain freedom of the mind — as well as cool vehicles that can physically take you there — and though these particular sketches are of course an evolu­tionary leap away from the sort of childhood sketchings they manage to retain that simple essence.

Hail Luigi Colani...

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

His is not one of the Italian names that dances trippingly off the tongue when speaking of innov­ation in car design. In fact, the prodi­gious moustache wearer and smoker of cigars isn’t even Italian. But that doesn’t mean he’s not a visionary of note. In fact, Luigi Colani is one of a dying breed of automotive modernists who believes in things like speed and the future — and as such we believe he should be given more recog­nition than he has to date received.

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Everything you need to know about Mr Colani can be found on his company’s website  — and know this: though he may not be producing any cars that will find their way into the forecourts of mainstream dealer­ships: his biog is a colourful testament to passion within design.

Two of our favourite Colani creations are the tumescent sports car from the late seventies which, it appears, was inspired by the free flowing, rounded forms of the natural world — and the Castrol-​​sponsored early experiement into speed and fuel consumption from 1974 (see images below).

Long may he draw and be inspired. We need a few more like him…

http://www.colani.ch/movie.html

Flawed Genius

Saturday, March 19th, 2011

God loves a trier. It could be the motto of the Italian motor­cycle industry. They have never let common sense stand in the way of a dream — the audacious dream of devel­oping a production bike that just might make the world genuflect with awe and admiration.

Passion is not exclus­ively Italian, especially when it comes to motor­cycles. But the madness of putting passion before reason helps to explain why plenty of half-​​baked, half-​​cocked ideas have led to the Italian bankruptcy courts.

Forget ‘failure is not an option’ and all that codswallop. Italian motor­cycle companies have often had business plans as firm as a string of over-​​cooked spaghetti.

Please don’t think I’m criti­cizing. In fact, I’m doing the opposite.

I absolutely love the Italians’ delusional, monoma­niacal self-​​belief. Just don’t ask me to sink my meager life savings into the product of their next hare-​​brained scheme.

Italian brands come and go like the seasons. Some, like salmon, make a huge effort to return to their roots to spawn just to roll over and die at the end of conception.

But, goddamnit, they keep trying – and with an intensity that has at times appeared pathological.

Much of the blame for this insatiable urge to build high performance, high spec production bikes – with equally strato­spheric price tags – can be laid at the door of Rimini-​​based business Bimota.

There was a time when this small firm of former heating and ventil­ation engineers built the most advanced – and arguably the best – road bike on the planet.

The Bimota SB2 used a Suzuki GS750 engine in a chromoly space-​​frame garnished with the highest quality components from legendary Italian engin­eering firms like Brembo, Campagnolo and Ceriani.

It’s worth mentioning that in the excep­tional case of their doomed two-​​stroke 500cc Vdue, Bimota always used third party engine suppliers. Despite the fact that these engine suppliers were often Japanese, Bimota remains as funda­mentally Italian as the Colosseum.

The ground­breaking SB2 was wrapped in a swooping fairing that was so ahead of its time it never came into fashion. It was a vision of biking created in 1976 – but as if focused through a lens crafted in the 21st Century.

In 1978 the American magazine Cycle found its performance to be comparable to only one other machine, Suzuki’s RG500 Grand Prix bike (the kind on which Sheene won his world titles).

If you were a brilliant welder, a super­lative mechanic, and an inspired designer, this is what you would aspire to build for yourself,” gushed the editorial.

The man behind this game-​​changing motor­cycle was Massimo Tamburini, perhaps the most lauded of all motor­cycle designers.

By the mid-​​1980s Bimota almost won the World Superbike world title and in the following decade the company were building models that could claim to be amongst the fastest road bikes available – partic­u­larly the SB2’s spiritual successor the Suzuki GSX-​​R1100-​​powered SB6 (below).

Along the way they would also produce the other­worldly Tesi, which was the first hub-​​centre-​​steered production bike. Bimota never lacked ambition, but as trail­blazers often are, they were subsequently attacked from all sides. Soon the innov­ative Bimota machines’ ‘unique selling points’ became as common­place as belly buttons.

Bimota continue to limp on, but it’s hard to under­stand how.

Of course, Italy does have a motor­cycle industry, and a pretty healthy one at that. MV is back in Italian hands after a short spell of being under Harley-​​Davidson control and wowing certain sections of the media with their new three-​​cylinder F3.

Moto-​​Guzzi and Aprilia are now under the wing of scooter giant Piaggio and both still breathing – and the latter are of course the current World Superbike Champions. But this success doesn’t appear to be leading to a huge sales upswing.

Then there’s Ducati, now the least typically Italian of all Italian bike manufac­turers. Pardon? Yes, you heard. And that, I believe, is exactly why they’re successful.

The most telling thing I ever heard in relation to a Ducati was from a friend who owned several. He said when he walked up to his 916 (above) he’d suck his gut in, just as he would in the presence of a woman he wanted to impress.

Up until the 916, designed by Tamburini (yes him again), Ducati were a bit-​​part player, like Bimota, but less glamorous.

They’d done the groundwork: the 851 and 888 had won World Superbike titles and their then new four-​​valve, desmodromic, liquid-​​cooled motors were crucial for the company’s later success — but only the really committed bought them.

Now Ducati arguably occupy the mainstream as firmly as any Japanese bike manufac­turer and their global dealer­ships are as cookie-​​cut as a fast food franchise.

Ducati were quick to follow the lead of Ferrari and Harley-​​Davidson and become a brand. Now their name is affixed to all manner of licensed products that they sell in stylish dealer­ships the world over. And the fans lap it up.

That’s not Italian passion. It’s hard-​​headed marketing.

Unfortunately, it’s what every bike manufac­turer thinks is the way to go.

But I disagree. I miss the quirky dealers who sold Ducatis before it all became corporate. You know, back when, it seemed, Ducati’s plant at Borgo Panigale’s very future teetered on the brink every full moon. Back when Ducati, along with all those other legendary names, epitomized the attitude and modus operandi of Italian motor­cycle manufacturers.

What can’t be argued with is Ducati’s current line-​​up of bikes. There aren’t any freaks or duds.

The ST series of dumpy tourers is a bad memory. The original Multistrada has been trampled over by the new 1200S. Yes, the 1198 is deriv­ative, but it is Ducati’s very essence distilled (and the management still whince when they hear the numbers 999).

The Hypermotard is commendably crackers, but it doesn’t have a tiger’s head on its side panels like the Darmah (above).

Having said that, give me a 2011 Monster 1100S rather than a Paso 907 any day.

But please Ducati – let me have the option of buying your bikes from a shop with as much character as the bikes themselves, not from a kind of McDonald’s with motorcycles.

Scaglietti Stories

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

When we stumbled upon a picture of Scaglietti’s stunning Ferrari 750 Monza Spyder this morning it led us to want to share some of the work of a rather unsung master of coachwork.

Baring in mind that this is the designer responsible for the body of the 250 TR as well as the devel­opment of that of the 250 GTO — it’s surprising that his name is not as well known as many other designers.

Sergio Scaglietti began working in the motoring industry in 1933 — when he was barely into his teens — when his father died and the necessity of making a living weighed hard on his shoulders.

He began by repairing and rebodying other people’s cars — eventually in the 1950s founding his own carrozzeria and swiftly becoming the stylist-​​in-​​chief to Scuderia Ferrari. In this amazing period, Sergio’s gut-​​borne aesthetic for the flowing yet aggressive line resulted in some of the most gorgeous (and valuable) automotive construc­tions ever.

It was also during this period that he turned his hand to a number of short run projects, including a very distinctive pod of custom bodied Corvettes.

Perhaps the fact that selling his company to the Fiat Group in the sixties — and subsequently more or less disap­pearing from view: Scaglietti never moved on from his identity as a classic coach builder — never getting involved in the the messy businesses of either engin­eering or marketing — that he remains a relat­ively anonymous name in the grand history of Italian car styling.

We think also, that when Ferrari honoured his memory with the name of its 2+2 GT the 612 Scaglietti in 2004, didn’t do his name any favours. Despite the aesthet­ically challenged sensib­il­ities of its detractors, the 612 (soon to be replaced by the FF shooting brake) ‚it was never the best received car to bear the badge of the prancing horse.

We, though, always loved the Long legged 612. For some reason it never photo­graphs well. In the flesh, however, it is a real classic.

No matter. A quick look at the gallery can dispel any doubts remaining that Mr. Scaglietti new how to bend some of the most beautiful steel imaginable.

Evocation of the Evoque

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

The New Range Rover looks like it will be reaching out to a new gener­ation of consumers who have a little envir­on­mental knowledge encoded into their love of the Land Rover brand. We hope that the company manages to stay true to their core whilst facing up to the envir­on­mental imper­atives facing us all.

The new Range certainly looks the part — it seems to have captured the stylish attitude (don’t mention the word bling) created so success­fully in the Range Rover Sport. But the company seems to be making much of its less Macho credentials.

As part of the Evoque launch, Land Rover has produced a series of films that give an in-​​depth look at the design and testing processes used during the Evoque’s devel­opment. Created to coincide with the Car Design News awards (at which the Evoque won Best Production Car), the series includes four individual pieces that focus on the innov­ative tests that the prototype vehicles are put through – including 3D virtual testing, camou­flaged runs and heat resistance in Dubai.

The first video in the series (below) gives a cinematic intro­duction to the Evoque paired with an interview with Land Rover design director Gerry McGovern. It also has some great behind-​​the-​​scenes footage of the designers and engineers at work.

Stay tuned for more inside track in the coming weeks.

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BMW: Joy

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011


image via The Always Gentleman

Car companies obviously spend a hell of a lot of money on ad campaigns.

As close watchers of the various ways that car makers seek constantly to reinvent themselves we were of course excited about BMW’s recent JOY campaign (vaguely fascist connota­tions notwithstanding).

It was a bold, top to bottom bit of marketing rather than a simple piece of rebranding. The JOY in BMW was injected in every way the brand was repres­ented; from the colours of their vehicles through to the tone of voice adopted by dealership receptionists.

But it occurred to us also, that they could done a similar job as the HD edit below, in an image as simple as the one above.

The message, after all is simple. You can have fun in your BMW car. The b&w air shot seems to say everything you could ever want to say.

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Car Crush No.5: Maserati A6G Zagato

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Sometimes a car stops you in its tracks through its sheer beauty. It happened this morning, and we had to share.

This latest aesthetic epiphany occurred in the midst of a discussion about whether or not Zagato had made any truly beautiful cars.

A huge Zagato-​​ed up Aston Vantage had burbled past at the top of my street — and my colleague had reckoned it was an ugly brute.

If it was a brute, I said, it was a gorgeous hunk of a British matinée idol.

Zagato has a bad rep in some people’s eyes. But I personally think there were a number of purely pretty Zagato designs out there. One look at this Zagato bodied Masser A6G from 1955 — and I think it’s impossible to deny that this is one truly drop-​​dead gorgeous Z-​​car. Nothing brutal here.

The curved propor­tions of the coachwork combined with its laid-​​back, hunkered down poise get me in the back of the throat. It’s the little details too. Those tiny rear headlamps. The huge Maserati trident on the grille. The minimal brushed steel bumpers and the pertly curved boot! Those Webers! Those wire wheels!

Only a handful of the Zagato-​​bodied A6Gs remain — one appar­ently changing hands at auction recently for six figures. Must work harder.

Images via Autoblog