Toyota Urban Cruiser concept
The
Urban Cruiser aims to build on Toyota's heritage in SUVs and suggests a
possible additional model for the line-up in future below the current
RAV4. Designed by Elvio d'Aprile at Toyota's ED2 studio in Nice, the
design features a pronounced vee-shape to the front end with no grille
and dropped fenders, giving a rather muted expression to the car,
slightly at odds with its fresh and extrovert SUV aims. There's nice
sculpting in the surfaces though, with a subtle play of convex and
concave wheelarch feature lines that converge at the car's geometric
center. There's a new rear end treatment too, with red taillamps and
aluminium framing mounted underneath the rear quarter windows, Finally,
the DLO shape echoes that of the Aygo, Corolla Verso and new RAV4 and
the design is set off to good effect by the satin lime green finish.
?The interior consists of several surfaces treated as different,
independent layers? according to designer Yi Yeong Jae and comprises
thin looped elements including the seats, headrests and center
console.
Fiat Sedici / Suzuki SX4
This
is a joint venture between Suzuki and Fiat, with production at Suzuki?s
new Magyar Suzuki plant in Hungary that already produces the Swift and
Ignis models for Europe. Designed by ItalDesign, this compact 4x4 is
more on-road highrider than a baby SUV such as the Toyota RAV4. Key
features include a wraparound rear glass and a strong shoulderline that
fades out where the side DLO kicks up under the front screen. The basic
bodyshell is shared between the two marques, with the Fiat Sedici
(sixteen, or 4x4!) having a slightly stronger look to it, thanks to the
use of contrasting wheelarch and bodyside mouldings, silver roof rails
and prominent skidplates front and rear.
The Suzuki
has a much tamer front end treatment, with a VW-like upper grille and
three conventional lower air intakes. Two versions are offered: the
basic ?Urban Line? or the tougher, more SUV-like ?Outdoor Line?, with
wheelarch mouldings, skidplates and 16? wheels. The interior is common
between the two, with differentiation limited to seat fabrics and
steering wheels.
Dodge Hornet concept
There
is something slightly ironic about the Hornet being shown in Geneva.
After a dearth of forward looking, compact and modern American car
design at Detroit, here is one of the big US brands showing just that;
a very American but very innovative and appealing small car.
The chunky exterior has various Dodge cues such as the DLO and most
notably the surface that rolls forwards from the shoulder down the
front of the fender. The longer front than rear door emphasises the
non-family focus of this car that, like the similarly sized Mini, would
target young couples. Some of the most interesting elements are the
concave side shoulder, spot lights in the door mirrors that also house
three vertical strips of indicator repeater, clear lamp covers that
extrude away from their base, super compact (post iDrive) HVAC controls
and hexagonal patterned rubber matt backed seats and boot floor. Tom
Tremont, Vice President of Product Design Chrysler Group, explained to
Car Design News that the extrovert rear spoiler had been directly
influenced by WRC rally cars.
We thought that this was
one of the best concepts at the show - a funky alternative to the
mainstream B-class hatch and one with a truly modern American aesthetic.
Ford S-Max
The
S-MAX shares much in common with the new Galaxy but aims to have
greater dynamic appeal and retain a closer connection with Ford of
Europe's new 'Kinetic Design' ethos, as previewed on the SAV and Iosis
concepts from last year. Positioned between the Mondeo and Galaxy, the
S-MAX is 69mm lower and around 50mm shorter than the new Galaxy and is
available with either 5 or 7 individual seats, depending on
specification. To emphasise the sporty credentials, top versions will
have the 2.5liter 220ps 5-cylinder Duratec engine from the Focus ST and
an SAV concept-style option with orange nose and 20? wheels will be
offered.
Ford is playing a bold game here, offering two
MPV's, both with 7 seats, but each with a slightly different slant.
It's a bit like the Range-Rover and Range-Rover Sport: same basic
concept but a different emphasis to cover fragmenting customer tastes.
It looks like Ford's stolen a march on others too: key rivals Opel and
Renault have nothing similar ? for now.
Volvo S80
The
original S80 was the first 'post square' Volvo that introduced most of
the design elements used on all subsequent Volvos. The new car does
little more than soften the edges of its predecessor and have a more
rakish rear screen similar to the S60 and Peugeot 607. As a result it
is a less distinctive, albeit an undeniably handsome, design.
Inside, the car features the thin centre stack first seen in the S40,
but now available in an old fashioned gloss dark wood that sits
uncomfortably with the modern hifi theme of this element ? we couldn't
imagine Bang and Olufsen offering this material choice. The rest of the
cabin is similarly conservative with little evidence of the
'Scandanavian' design qualities much talked about by Volvo at its
unveiling or that the VCC at Geneva 2003 so elegantly showcased.
Ultimately the new S80 is a rather underwhelming evolution of the
pioneering original S80.
Rolls-Royce 101 EX
The
101EX is effectively a fixed-head coupe version of the 100EX shown at
Geneva two years ago, albeit clearly a few steps closer to production
reality and with some new and innovative design elements.
The exterior shares much of the preceding concept's front - although
the flying lady is now made from crystal-like clear acrylic and the
polished aluminium windshield surround is made from several pieces, not
machined from one massive billet of metal. A shallow rear window sits
on a softly surfaced roof through which you can see the straight
grained rose wood and red oak veneer in the rear parcel shelf and
window surround.
The interior's most impressive
feature was hard to see as Rolls Royce declined entry to their
?experimental car?, but was a roof lining with 1600 light emitting
diodes woven in to give a ?starlight headlining?. Other neat features
included the ashtray for rear seat passengers that telescopes back from
the side door and wood lined under-floor box for sports equipment in
the boot.


















