SHANGHAI AUTO SHOW PREVIEW

Audi, Auto Shanghai, Automotive Design, BMW, British Cars, Car Design, Concept cars, Crossover, German Cars, Hybrid Cars, Hybrids, Interiors, Mercedes-Benz, Motor Shows, Peugeot, Porsche, Rolls-Royce, Show cars, Volkswagen 5 Comments »

By Giancarlo Perini ©

AUDI 2011 Q3

The 2011 Auto Shanghai motor show, opening in a week time, will not be business as usual. Indeed it will mark a new era of the entire world car industry, the one steered by the Chinese market and industry. China is the biggest car market, and the one that is growing faster worldwide. The leading premium brands are betting on for most of their growth in the decade. Read the rest of this entry »

ROLLS-ROYCE LUXURY FOR THE VERY BRITISH MINI GOODWOOD.

Auto Shanghai, Automotive Design, British Cars, Car Design, Interiors, Mini, Motor Shows, Rolls-Royce, Show cars 3 Comments »

By Giancarlo Perini ©

MINI 2011 Inspired by Goodwood

Can you concentrate all the luxury of a most aristocratic Rolls-Royce into a compact Mini?

Probably not. Yet you can go a very long way with the help of the Rolls-Royce design team led by Ian Camerun. Just look at the very plush and British interior of the Mini Inspired by Goodwood to be unveiled for the first time at Auto Shanghai next week and you may agree that a compact city car can be very seriously luxurious, filled with the finest material, soft leather and quite a bit of traditional walnut veneer. Read the rest of this entry »

ROLLS-ROYCE 2009 GHOST. SUPERLATIVE SIMPLICITY.

Automotive Design, British Cars, Car Design, Car Styling, Flamboyant Cars, Motor Shows, Rolls-Royce, Various 1 Comment »

Absolutely on time, as expected within the world of aristocracy, here comes the Rolls-Royce “princess”. It was fist announced, early this year by the “200EX” traditional  number-and-suffix lettering at the Geneva Motor Show. Now it is ready to make its official appearance with the name of “Ghost”. The name has a long tradition and deep meaning at Rolls-Royce; however, the 2009 Ghost is really something you want to see. When you have this chance, her most striking character impress you from the very beginning: how simple, beautiful and elegant it is, despite its unusual length. Indeed, Ian Cameron, Chief Designer of Rolls-Royce, stresses that “Simplicity is the hardest design principle to follow.” in presenting the latest delivery of his team of very talented designers.

Ghost’s flowing lines are dominated by its majestic ‘Yacht Line’ styling. Large, uninterrupted surfaces flow between finely sculpted horizontal lines that provide definition. Together, the upward-sweeping sill line and low-cut roof create a powerful profile, almost as though the cabin has been pushed toward the rear. Powerful shoulders and flanks draw in sharply as they flow from the rear wings to the tail lights, while touches such as the optional chromed exhausts hint at Ghost’s more dynamic nature.

While incorporating classic Rolls-Royce design cues – the elevated prow, long bonnet, short front overhang, sharply raked A-pillar and elegant tail – Ghost exudes an informal aura. Contemporary touches include self-righting wheel centres and the Xenon headlamps that frame the latest evolution of the Rolls-Royce grille. Here the sides of the intake have been curved inwards and the vanes set back into the opening. “We wanted this to be less reminiscent of the traditional Parthenon style and more like a jet intake,” says Ian Cameron.

A contrasting Silver Satin finish (introduced on 200EX) is an option for the bonnet, grille and windscreen surround. The finish is achieved by setting silver metallic paint under a layer of lacquer, giving a flawless matte finish. The bonnet and windscreen surround are then honed from aluminum.

The central principle of delivering simplicity out of complexity runs throughout Ghost. Everything is designed, engineered and crafted to enhance the drive and ride experience, not to complicate it.

Ghost rides on a bed of air. Double-wishbone front suspension and multi-link rear suspension work with an intelligent, four-cornered, air-suspension system and electronic variable damping to deliver the refinement that has been associated with Rolls-Royce for more than 100 years.

The new air suspension system in Ghost is so sensitive that it can detect even the smallest of changes. For example, it will sense the movement of a single rear passenger from one side of the seat to the other and compensate accordingly. A complex computer system reads multiple inputs from sensors around the car; the dampers alone make individual load calculations every 2.5 milliseconds. This ensures not only perfect comfort but also precise steering and dynamics for the driver. The air suspension system also incorporates a lift and kneel function, raising or lowering Ghost by 25mm.

Inside Ghost.

The interior design team has come up with a contemporary ambience while staying true to Rolls-Royce Motor Cars’ traditions of fine materials and peerless comfort. There are elegant, frosted lamps and chrome door handles, traditional violin key switches and eyeball air vents, frosted white dials and refined instrumentation. Deep-pile carpets can be complemented by optional lambs wool floor mats for a truly luxurious feel.

Charles Coldham, Interior Designer stresses that “Ghost is as refined and cosseting as anything this company has ever produced.”

While Ghost is 400mm shorter overall than the Phantom saloon its interior space is comparable.

Driver and passengers, enter into Ghost through substantial doors. Housed within the front doors are integrated Teflon-coated umbrellas. The rear doors are traditional, rear-hinged coach doors, opening to a generous 83 degrees. Once the passenger is inside, these doors can be closed at the touch of a button. The interior space is filled with natural light, enhanced by the optional Panorama.

Within Ghost’s ample doors and high shoulder line, occupants feel serene, cosseted and safe.

In the rear, the intimate ambience of the lounge seat is emphasized by its position behind the C-pillar, heightening the sense of privacy. The informal seating creates a convivial environment, its slight curve allowing you to turn more easily towards the person next to you. Its elevated position gives a clear view past the electronically retracting Spirit of Ecstasy to the road ahead.

Individual lounge seating is offered as an alternative to the standard lounge configuration. This allows the addition of a massage function and also perforated leather for a cooling stream of air from the seat surface. A cool box with interior illumination and integrated champagne glasses is also available.

Veneered picnic tables are another option, incorporating the finest leather and veneers matched to the rest of Ghost’s interior. Fitted to the rear of each front seat, these tables are a traditional Rolls-Royce design cue and finished with a veneered surface with leather-covered backs.

A modern Rolls-Royce.

Ghost is the most powerful car that Rolls-Royce Motor Cars has ever produced. However, Rolls-Royce power is delivered in a very different manner to other cars. It arrives in an elegant, cosseting way that some have described as being designed to lower the pulse, not raise it.

The principle of simplicity extends to the act of driving Ghost. The host of complex engineering software and technologies beneath the surface serve to make driving easier and more enjoyable, not to intrude or confuse.

Ghost is powered by a brand new, 6.6 litre twin-turbo V12 engine, unique to the model. Featuring direct injection, it produces 563bhp – enough to propel Ghost from 0-60 mph in just 4.7 seconds* and on to an electronically governed top speed of 155mph. With 780 Nm of torque available at just 1,500rpm, delivery of power is immediate and extremely smooth.

“A Rolls-Royce should be graceful in every way: the way it handles, feels and brakes.”
says Helmut Riedl, Engineering Director.

EVERYTHING (ALMOST) YOU WANT TO SEE OF THE 2009 CONCORSO D’ELEGANZA DI VILLA D’ESTE.

Alfa Romeo, Aston Martin, Automotive Design, BMW, Bentley, Bertone, British Cars, Bugatti, Cabriolet, Car Design, Car Styling, Concept cars, Concourse D'Elegance, Corvette, Designers, Electric Cars, Ferrari, Fiat, Frua, Fuoriserie, Italian Cars, Italian Coachbuilders, Lamborghini, Lancia, Maserati, Mercedes-Benz, Mindset, Perana Performance, Pininfarina, Porsche, RACING CARS, Rinspeed, Rolls-Royce, Sports Cars, Stile Bertone, Touring, Tuned for the road, Villa d'Este, Zagato 2 Comments »

The Concorso d’Eleganza di Villa d’Este this years has been as good as the weather. That is to say that half of it was very good, with peaks of excellence, and the remaining half was bad, raining and boring, with touches of ugliness.

 

 

 By the end of the elegant week-end on the Lake of Como, one would say it was not one the best edition ever but still offered enough interesting cars to look at, people to greet and talk to, and subjects to discuss.

 

 

 

As such it was one not to be missed. Those who did not attend it missed the extremely rare chance of hearing the sibilo and smelling the pollution of its turbine engine, not to mention seeing this extraordinary visualisation of the dreams about the cars of the future they were dreaming in the fifties and sixties.

BERTONE SPICUP - BMW 2800, 1969

  Read the rest of this entry »

ROLLS-ROYCE 200EX CONCEPT IN GENEVA.

Automotive Design, British Cars, Car Design, Concept cars, Designers, Flamboyant Cars, Motor Shows, Rolls-Royce, Show cars 1 Comment »

A preview of the “smaller” Rolls-Royce, so far known as the RR4 (that is the fourth model in the range after the Phantom, its Coupé and Drophead) will be offered by the British carmaker of prestigious car with their “Rolls-Royce 200EX”, at the Geneva Motor Show.

Read the rest of this entry »

STILEBERTONE NEW DIRECTOR OF DESIGN IS JASON CASTRIOTA.

Automotive Design, Bertone, Car Design, Car Styling, Concept cars, Concourse D'Elegance, Ferrari, Flamboyant Cars, Fuoriserie, Italian Cars, Italian Coachbuilders, Maserati, Pininfarina, Rolls-Royce, Show cars, Sports Cars, Supercars, Tuned for the road No Comments »

The news is not official yet, but within the designer’s circle of Southern California everybody seems to believe that Jason Castriota – a past student of the Art Center College of Design – will be the new director of design of Stilebertone.This would be confirmed by the fact that Castriota visited the Los Angeles Auto Show and attended the Automotive Designers Night there with Mr. Roland Martin, Sales and Marketing manager of Stilebertone. They travelled together from the Ghangzhou Auto Show to Long Angeles and if two plus two equal four, one has to come to the conclusion that Castriota has not resisted the temptation to take the position that Giorgetto Giugiaro, Marcello Gandini and Marc Deschamp had before establishing their own consulting businessIn a recent interview to our publication, Teresio Gaudio, CEO of Stilebertone has anticipated that the company is expanding its design potential with addition of three new designers and a new director of design. Jason Castriota, the most talented designers of Ferraris and Supercars in recent years. Castriota is credited for the design of the Pininfarina Maserati Birdcage, the Maserati Granturismo, the Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano and P4/5. Most recently the Pininfarina Rolls-Royce Hyperion “fuoriserie”.Born in New York from Italian parents, Jason went to Pininfarina for a working-stage from Art Centre College of Design in Pasadena, California, but after the planned “semester” he did not return to the U.S.A. He wanted to stay at Pininfarina and learn by actually designing cars. At Art Center, Castriota was a student of Ken Okuyama who later became his boss at Pininfarina.The Pininfarina design studios in Cambiano are regarded by hundreds of designers as the “Best design school in the world”.

ROLLS-ROYCE HYPERION BY PININFARINA FOR PEBBLE BEACH.

Automotive Design, British Cars, Car Design, Car Styling, Cars, Concourse D'Elegance, Events and Seminars, Fuoriserie, Italian Coachbuilders, Pininfarina, Rolls-Royce, Supercars 3 Comments »

 DEDICATED TO ANDREA PININFARINA.

 Andrea Pininfarina has suddenly passed away on August 7th; the very day one of his latest achievement was due to be air freighted to the United States, on behalf of its owner: Mr. Roland Hall.

The British gentleman who commissioned the design and construction of such an outstanding work of art, shocked by the tragic event, immediately wanted the car to be dedicated to the memory of Andrea Pininfarina “such an extraordinary man”.

 I am proud of joining him in dedicating this report (actually drafted before the fatal accident) to his memory, his work and his men, who passionately worked to deliver this unique “Fuoriserie by Pininfarina”.

___________ Read the rest of this entry »

PININFARINA ROLLS-ROYCE HYPERION UNVEILED.

Automotive Design, British Cars, Car Design, Car Styling, Cars, Concourse D'Elegance, Fuoriserie, Italian Coachbuilders, Pininfarina, Rolls-Royce 1 Comment »

 Last month I accepted an invitation to interview Pininfarina’s designers on the Rolls-Royce Hyperion there were about to complete in Cambiano, at the condition that I would not publish my report before August 16th. This was required by their patron, the British gentleman who commissioned the car and will eventually own it. To honor my promise I am not going to add anything to what I have been allowed to write so far. But I have not promised not to offer you a fair chance to look at the first (digital?) images of the car published by Autoblog.it. Have a look here, and let me know what is your opinion, as soon as you like.

Ciao

PININFARINA HYPERION KEEP SAME WHEELBASE

Automotive Design, Car Design, Car Styling, Cars, Concourse D'Elegance, Fuoriserie, Italian Cars, Italian Coachbuilders, Pininfarina, Rolls-Royce, Supercars No Comments »

A friend of mine called to talk about the stunning Rolls-Royce roadster Pininfarina and their client will show at Pebble Beach. He has offered me a couple of more accurate information I need to share with you. First the original wheelbase has not been cut, as the rendering has suggested, even though the roadster is a two-seater. Second, despite Pininfarina expertise on retractable hard top, Hyperion is not a convertible-coupé but will just do with a traditional soft-top. As for the material used for the all-new skin it is not clear whether it is alumium (polished) steel (stainless?) or carbon fibre.

 

 

 

 

Pininfarina’s director of design, Lowie Vermeersch, did not want add anything but said “you will be surprised”, and added: “there is also a surprise in the cockpit but you have to wait and see.”

EXCLUSIVE PININFARINA ROLLS-ROYCE ROADSTER AT THE PEBBLE BEACH CONCOURS D’ELEGANCE.

Automotive Design, Car Design, Car Styling, Cars, Concourse D'Elegance, Fuoriserie, Italian Cars, Italian Coachbuilders, Pininfarina, Rolls-Royce, Supercars No Comments »

By Giancarlo Perini© – Rendering source: Archivio Perini©

For editorial use only.

Pininfarina designers and engineers are busy putting the latest touches and caring for the latest details on their ultimate “fuoriserie”. A very special, tailor made Rolls-Royce Roadster – commissioned by a car enthusiast from the U.S.A. – that will be unveiled for the first time ever at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, in mid-august this year.

This very special one-off, named Hyperion , the titanic hero of Greek mythology, is a two-seater that has its roots in the Rolls Royce Drophead Coupé and comes with an exclusive design that has required a significant reduction of the wheelbase.
Hyperion is much more than a short-wheelbase Drophead Coupé but an entirely new car.
The iconic character of the original Rolls-Royce have been maintained and enhanced but the entire skin is new.
BMW’s member of the board and Rolls-Royce CEO Mr. Ian Robertson has confirmed this is a private initiative one of their customer and that the company is well aware and informed of the project, but said the company is not involved with its design, engineering or construction.
Pininfarina has a long lasting relationship with Rolls-Royce for which in the pastes decades they designed the Camargue and, more recently, the convertible roof of the Bentley Azure.

It is not clear yet whether Hyperion will come with the retractable hard top of many popular “convertible-coupè”, of which Pininfarina are specialists.

 

In recent years Pininfarina has developed several design and engineering solutions for retractable hard tops for several carmakers. The company currently builds three convertible-coupé for three different brands: the Ford Focus CC, the Volvo C70 and the Mitsubishi Colt CZC.

End of this report by Giancarlo Perini ©.

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