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What's the point of concept cars?


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نتيجة بحث الصور عن ‪cars‬‏

Concept cars look beautiful and futuristic, but why do manufacturers spend millions developing them if they're never going to make it into production?

Take, for example, the DS X e-tense, a "2035 dream car" produced by the French luxury brand DS.

Half open-topped sports car, half luxury saloon, its outlandish styling looks as though it has come straight from the pages of a superhero magazine.

Inside, it's no less radical - there's even a holographic personal assistant.

It is designed to show what the company thinks a hugely powerful, all-electric self-driving machine might actually be like.
It bears little relation to anything the brand currently produces, but that is hardly the point.

Some of its radical styling is expected to make it on to a new road-going car that will be unveiled later this year. Other ideas will feed into future designs, and provide a road map for technical research.

"A concept car is a development accelerator," explains DS design director Thierry Metroz. Its role, he says, is to "test the new technologies that we imagine for the future, and accelerate their development".

Some concepts are a clear statement of intent.

Three years ago, Porsche stole the headlines at the Geneva Motor Show with the Mission E - a concept for a fast, high-powered, long-range electric car.

نتيجة بحث الصور عن ‪cars‬‏

The reaction, from press and public, was very positive. As a result, the German marque will begin production of a real-world electric sportscar, the Taycan, in 2019.

Prototypes like this take ideas that are already relatively well developed, and put them into a public arena to test reactions.

Others have a life beyond the shows.

The 1955 Lincoln-Mercury Futura, for example, starred in a Hollywood movie, and eventually became a Batmobile in the 1960s Batman TV series.

The 1955 Lincoln-Mercury Futura

Making sense of change is a common theme among concept car designers at the moment.

For generations car companies have been focused on making petrol or diesel models that appeal to individual drivers.

But the current move towards electrification, the headlong development of self-driving technology and the likely expansion of shared use vehicles, potentially threatens the very existence of traditional manufacturers.

If we really are heading for a world where city dwellers - at least one day - rely on electric-powered robot taxis to get around, car brands will have to adapt or face extinction as their traditional business models collapse.

 

Renault has chosen to address this uncertainty by embracing it.

The French manufacturer has produced a whole fleet of concepts, offering different perspectives on this electrified, automated future.

They include a car which actually becomes part of your living room, a large robot-taxi designed to transport a large group of people at once, and an automated delivery van.

At the Paris Motor Show recently, it launched the EZ-Ultimo, a sleek driverless luxury limousine with wooden floors, and styling modelled on the radical Prada store building in Tokyo. It certainly looks striking.

Renault's EZ-Ultimo

 

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