Posts Tagged ‘Geneva Motor Show’

Friday Car Crush #21: Opel GT/W 'Geneve'

Friday, October 28th, 2011

The original Opal GT was a quirky piece of design. When it was presented at the 1965 Frankfurt Motor Show it was the manifest­ation of a real tangent for a European company.

There were low front-​​end with pop-​​up headlights, flared arches at the front, a pinched middle section and bulbous arches to the aft — just like its American cousin the Corvette, of course.

Over 100,000 GTs were produced between 1968 and 1973 — when in the UK the Vanden Plas Allegro was the height of domestic sophistication.

The GT/​W Geneve was a one-​​off exper­iment, a pretty fastback which was specially constructed for Opel’s stand at the 1975 Geneva salon; and would have spotlighted rotary engined aspir­a­tions for the German company. It appeals to us for that lovely Joe 90–ish futurism. The extreme rake of the rear three-​​quarters makes is sight, and the inspired wires and gold flake job sets it off perfectly.

Pity it never made it out to the roads…

Geneva Salon Roundup

Monday, March 8th, 2010

The 918 takes the classic Spyder fomat and plugs it into the 21st century

I’m not the greatest lover of motor shows. They’re all titil­lation and no consum­mation. I’ve never really under­stood their appeal in the same way I don’t get strip clubs. Just looking at cars is the same as looking at an attractive member of the opposite sex; very pleasant, as far as it goes, but you only get about ten per cent of the pleasure that should be had.

And it may be also that motor shows will wither away. The British show was once one of the most important but has effect­ively died off. Even the mighty Detroit, Tokyo and Frankfurt shows have been clobbered by the recession: non-​​attendance by a big carmaker at one of those was once unthinkable, but as the recession struck they bailed out in such numbers that last year’s Tokyo show was almost cancelled.

But it’s superfast broadband that might finally kill the motor show. Why would you travel for hours to a grim part of town to traipse around a draughty exhib­ition hall when you’ll be able to download hi-​​def, 3D renderings of the latest models which you can configure with your choice of colour and trim, look at without the backs of other people’s heads getting in the way, and then get into (virtually), start up and drive?

But if one show survives, I hope it’s Geneva. For a start it’s five minutes’ walk from the airport, so you can Sleazyjet in from anywhere. Second, it’s small enough that your feet won’t hurt by the end of the day. Third, despite the size, all the major carmakers and lots of insig­ni­ficant but insane ones are here: nobody bails on Geneva, yet.

I’ll get to the important cars of this year’s show in a moment, but those tiny, loopy tuning firms alone make Geneva worth the trip. You’ll see stuff you just won’t see elsewhere; really outrageous cars that it would be completely unacceptable to launch anywhere else. Thought the flagrant, aggressive SUV was a thing of the past? Oh no. Maybe it’s because Switzerland is neutral territory and non-​​EU that Hamann feels safe revealing its Range Rover Sport-​​based Conqueror II, or its BMW X6-​​based Tycoon Evo M. Carlsson brought its €429,000, 735bhp, Mercedes SL-​​based C25, whose envir­on­mental impact will be limited only by the fact that just one will be supplied to each of 25 countries. Swiss tuner Mansory has somehow managed to get hold of a Rolls-​​Royce Ghost already and pimped it with a shocking electric blue and gold paintjob, which looked even more garish alongside its more subtle but otherwise entirely pointless carbon-​​fibre bodied Mercedes G-​​wagen.

Ugliest was probably the Malaysian-​​made, V8-​​powered Bufori Geneva limo: slogan, ‘A Statement of Pride,’ though ‘a statement of staggering bad taste’ might be more truthful. Who in their right mind buys these things? Is Switzerland so awash with idle cash that these excres­cences are needed to soak it up? Even Bentley wasn’t immune, displaying a foul purple-​​and-​​cream Continental.

The design houses like Giugiaro have always used Geneva to show their own work, unfettered by the restric­tions of a commission from a big carmaker, and these cars are another good reason for coming. Pininfarina’s take on an Alfa spider is bewitching; Bertone’s Pandion, a variation on the same theme, more challenging. But you’ve never seen anything like the Pandion’s rear grille: a mad, asymmetric jumble of spikes, somewhere between a porcupine’s quills and broken glass. This is proper, free-​​thinking car design; you wonder if a big carmaker would have the balls to put it into production.

There were some great-​​looking cars from the major makers, though. The show-​​stopper was unques­tionably Porsche’s 918 Spyder. It was a genuine surprise; when the covers are whipped off new cars at motor shows they have almost always been leaked in advance or shown to car magazines so they can put them on their covers in time. But this was a genuine shock: a plug-​​in hybrid supercar with over 500bhp and a 3.2sec 0-​​60mph time, yet returning 90mpg and 70g/​km of CO2. Those figures are greener than a Prius, and Porsche is not in the habit – unlike some other car firms – of making claims it can’t prove. For once, looking was almost enough; the 918 manages to appear compact, delicate and light but raw and aggressive all at once. It also looked bored on that stand; bored being looked at when it’s built to be driven. And you just know it will be incan­descent to drive.

The most signi­ficant car of the show is probably Audi’s A1, because it sits at the nexus of a series of inter­con­nected trends. Audi is on a roll, despite the downturn. People want cool small cars again for a bunch of reasons and they want a premium badge. The Mini better watch out. Ford showed its new Focus, more signi­ficant than the A1 in terms of numbers, but the looks are a little Korean and you just know it will be more of the same from Ford; great dynamics, great quality, and a car that doesn’t treat the ‘ordinary’ driver like a schmo.

Alfa’s new, Focus-​​sized Giulietta was much better-​​looking, but like I said, the looks are only ten per cent of the appeal.
Elsewhere, like every other motor show for the past two years, pretty much every big carmaker had some sort of electric/​hybrid/​whatever concept on display, but there’s a big difference between just saying your new concept runs on manure and emits only butter­flies, and actually putting an appre­ciably greener car into profitable mass production.

And like every other motor show, Geneva’s halls are crammed with car-​​anoraks festooned with cameras and laden with brochures, with the garishly-​​dressed and bouffanted ‘valued clients’ being buttered up by the more exclusive carmakers (so that’s who buys a Bufori…), with teams of Chinese engineers taking digital pictures of obscure parts of the latest models, and with the angular, archi­tec­tural, intim­id­at­ingly beautiful stand-​​girls.

I’ve never quite under­stood this either; if a carmaker wants us to look at its new model, why does it distract us with beautiful women wearing very little? And why does the car industry continue to get away with a ‘marketing’ tactic that should have died off at the same time the Miss World contest was taken off TV? Maybe there’s a parallel with motor shows in general; maybe predic­tions of their demise are premature. A few more will die off, certainly. But if you don’t mind just looking, go to Geneva.

See the Toyota FT-86 at Geneva

Monday, February 15th, 2010

It’s comfornting to know that there’s a new hot launch on the way that’s not either strato­spheric and ridiculous (think Aston 177, or Lexus LFA) or pious and overly eco-​​righteous (think almost everything else).

Next month’s Geneva salon may contain more of the polarised world of new car launches, but at Least the FT-​​86 is a dynamic little speedster that will be (sort of) accessible to mere mortals.

The five-​​seat FT-​​86 (Hachi Roku according to Jap car fetishists) goes back to the funda­mental qualities of the classic sports car with its rear-​​wheel drive config­ur­ation, compact dimen­sions, low centre of gravity and light­weight construction. Under the bonnet there is a 2.0-litre boxer engine that is strong on both performance as well as efficiency.

The show car’s bodywork is finished in Flash Red, an eye-​​catching shade that contains a hint of blue. Inside, the cabin design further expresses the car’s classic sporting qualities with many of the struc­tural elements left uncovered.

It’s still only a concept, of course, but it’s continual unveiling gives a hint that we could expect to see the car available, and probably not for too kingly a ransom, before we’re too old to enjoy such a thing.

Here’s hoping.

The Billionaire Boys Club

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Somewhere in the deep lying recesses of your mind where there are no bound­aries to things and no constraints to your indul­gence you drive a Spyker. The cars made by the Dutch company, which was resur­rected in the nineties by a visionary of bespoke car culture – was every pubescent boy’s autoerotic fantasy – and the reality of just a handful of billion­aires. But the Spyker story just might be becoming an object lesson on natural selection – and a demon­stration of the theory of evolution applied to the car industry. There’s symmetry to the fact that this is the year of the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin’s birth and the 150th of the public­ation of his revolu­tionary book The Origin of Species. We are after all living through a time when nature raw in tooth and claw is expressing its cold impar­ti­ality in deciding what thrives and what perishes – in both the natural world and the business world alike. Whatever its destiny Spyker was born of admirable dreams and inten­tions. Founder Victor Muller’s vision was to fuse aviation design and auto engin­eering brilliance associated with the Spyker brand with a renewed market possib­ility of bespoke vehicles for gentlemen of the utmost discernment and taste. For a while, the mission looked bang on course. There were a series of truly spectacular and innov­ative models, led by the long, torsional C8, the SSUV ‘Peking-​​Paris’ crosser and the sleek, Zagato-​​designed C12. There was the move a couple of years ago into Formula 1, (followed by its swift exit.) Now while the rest of us are getting quickly sick of the forecasts of doom, Spyker are bullishly presenting the production version of the audacious C8 Aerilon at Geneva next month, as well as bringing to market a road going version of their Le Mans race car based on the C8 GT, the LM85. The question remains for Spyker watchers is this: are these fascin­ating breeds doomed to go the way of the dodo – or the way of the platypus (which the Aileron subtly resembles). As Darwin described 150 years ago, highly specialised envir­on­ments call for highly specialised adapt­a­tions. If a genus cannot adapt appro­pri­ately to the envir­onment in which it finds itself, it will eventually become extinct. Anyone who cares about hand wrought brilliance in the face of encroaching automotive mediocrity should pray that Spyker finds its course.