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Sunday, 24 February 2013
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
BMW
Faces of the future: the concept cars at the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este 2012
The participants in this year’s Concept Cars & Prototypes competition have been announced at the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este press conference in Milan.
The participants in this year’s Concept Cars & Prototypes competition have been announced at the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este press conference in Milan.
Hamburg volvo car
“We name it the ‘moral market’. That means that every single consumer must consider the buying decision.”
To hear more from journalists and influencers about the V60 Plug-in Hybrid, take a look at this video from Hamburg, the latest city in our European tour:
To hear more from journalists and influencers about the V60 Plug-in Hybrid, take a look at this video from Hamburg, the latest city in our European tour:
Monday, 14 May 2012
Sunday, 13 May 2012
Coughing through the sour smell of success at the Beijing Motor Show
The mystery of this vehement effort at exclusivity only deepens when you enter the China International Exhibition Center—nine separate, cavernous chambers seemingly arrayed around a grid of narrow plazas, but in reality, a convolution of positive and negative space that would confound an Escherite Theseus. The only thing more constricted than the foot traffic here is the air circulation, with dysfunctional air conditioning causing temperatures to hover in the high 80s, off-gassing plumbing that makes the dross trench in a Mumbai slum seem like a Waterworks showroom, and distorted music percussing through the miasma in a manner seemingly designed to procure confessions.
"We're all worried about the Chinese taking over the world right now," a public relations flack said while fanning himself. "Can you imagine what they'll be able to accomplish when they get organized?"
Probably not manufacture a car that could compete outside a captive domestic market, if the vehicles displayed here by the local firms were any indication. If the Korean auto manufacturers are the new Japanese, the Chinese are the new old Koreans—or Yugoslavs. Chinese cars showcase an almost intemperate variety of disinspiration: slathered in a tinsel factory of plastic chrome, mimicking the most contemptible designs of the past two decades (Aztek, last-gen Impala, and Hummer H1 among them), and even seeming to provide the inspiration for Bentley's ignominious EXP 9F SUV concept. Attempting rescue from this Sino-banality was Chery's linked chain of insectoid electric @ant cars that simultaneously conjured hypermiling and "Human Centipede," a baleen Geely GE that made the bilious 2006 Chrysler Imperial concept look restrained, and rumors of a semi-autonomous BYD economy car that could be called up to your doorstep with a remote control — presumably for those Chinese ashamed at their inability to employ a chauffeur.
If ultimate luxury isn't accessible to you, Beijing also proffered lavishness at lower price points, mainly via length. Seemingly motivated by the unmitigated displeasure of navigating the city's choked and chaotic ring roads, an immense range of otherwise masspirational vehicles are contorted at the local factory into chauffeur-ready, extended-wheelbase models: the BMW 3- and 5-Series, the Audi 4 and 6, the Mercedes E. Even Hyundai's top-of-the-bottom Equus is offered here as a chunky Limousine, with a blank panel grafted in aft of the B-pillar. But the award for audacious span must go to the new Citroen DS 9 concept, the Ming-era Great Wall of horizontality, featuring an axle-to-axle measure roughly twice that of a 13-passenger van.
Which kind of feels like a metaphor for the entire Beijing show: a mimetic mélange of memorable cues, assembled recklessly — and often cynically — and leaving you longing for an expectorant.
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