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Antoine
11-02-2005, 12:29 AM
Senku concept hints at Mazda's design direction of the future



MARK RECHTIN | Automotive News
Posted Date: 11/1/05

http://www.japanesecarfans.com/news/2060216.003/2060216.003.1L.jpg
TOKYO -- Mazda Motor Corp. showed a concept vehicle that hints at design ideas for a decade from now.

The Senku concept, unveiled at the Tokyo Motor Show, likely will not carry the design of the next generation of Mazda vehicles but instead the generation after that, executives said.

Moray Callum, Mazda's design chief, said the Senku's "very strong shoulder," which emphasizes the front wheel arch, likely will make its way into Mazda design.

Next generation?

"We don't know if it's the next generation," Callum said. "We asked designers to stretch and say where we would be in 10 years' time. I'd be very happy if this is where we were in 10 years."

Mazda's designers were instructed to find "new graphic expressions and new proportions" with the Senku, said Norihito Iwao, lead designer of Mazda's advance design group. Mazda Motor CEO Hisakazu Imaki said he and Executive Vice President John Parker gave designers "strict instructions for instilling 'zoom-zoom' into the design."

However, "we gave them no details," Imaki said.

Added Parker: "Many designs of concept vehicles are close to production. We decided it was time to give our designers some freedom of expression to stay on the leading edge."

Mazda's Japanese studios in Hiroshima and Yokohama, as well as its California and Germany studios, are competing to create Mazda's new design language. The German studio created a small car for the Frankfurt auto show in September. The Senku came from Yokohama. The California studio will create a concept vehicle for the Detroit show in January.

Optical illusion

The Senku's body-side sheet metal has the optical illusion of "flame surfacing" similar to the BMW Z4. But the apparent concave-to-convex sheet metal bending is actually two convex surfaces joined at a crease. By doing that, the car's rocker panel area swoops under the car more dramatically, Iwao said.

"We needed tension in the side panel. The engine is behind the front axle, so we needed to show the energy coming out of the car. That's why there is no negative (concave) panel," Iwao said.

Jim Hall, an analyst with AutoPacific in Southfield, Mich., said here that there are two ways to design a design-theme car. One is as a sheet metal sketch, which bears no resemblance to anything in the lineup. The other is as a theme car, which shows a deliberate and obvious direction toward an existing vehicle. The Senku is a sheet metal sketch, Hall said.

"The Senku has a lot of ways it can be interpreted," Hall said. "It gives latitude for designers in the future, but how much of this ends up in actual cars depends on the vehicle type and positioning. We'll probably just see a part here and a part there."

Captain KRM P5
11-02-2005, 12:35 AM
mazda has been stealing starfleet shuttlecraft apparantly

vindication
11-02-2005, 12:43 AM
I was lookin at that thing the other day and scratching my head. but to look at future mazda design, just look at the rx-8. it will and has flowed through all new designs

CRZbrussian
11-02-2005, 12:44 AM
mazda has been stealing starfleet shuttlecraft apparantly

(hah) nice

yeah i don't know, i guess time will tell, see how it looks then

altspace
02-16-2006, 06:48 PM
At Canadian International Autoshow

The Mazda Senku concept car made its North American debut today at the Canadian International AutoShow in Toronto. Designed in Mazda's advanced design studio in Yokohama, Japan, it is one of three design concepts developed for the 2005-2006 international auto show circuit and made its world debut at the Tokyo Motor Show in October 2005.

"The Mazda Senku concept car gives a glimpse of one direction in which Mazda may go in the design of a four-seat rotary-engine powered sports car in the future," said Moray Callum, Executive Officer and General Manager of Mazda's Design Division, in unveiling the concept car to the media.

One of the most dramatic features of the Mazda Senku concept is the large-aperture, electrically powered sliding doors. Dubbed "flying wings" by Mazda, these doors each have an 800mm-wide opening but do not compromise the beauty of the concept's contours. The wide apertures combine with high front-seat hip points to allow smooth ingress and egress. Also, the sliding nature of the doors enables the doors to be opened when there is limited space on either side of the car (as opposed to hinged doors).

In the Senku concept, Mazda's innovative Rotary Engine Hybrid architecture permits a long wheelbase and taut-looking, minimal overhangs. Meanwhile, large tires help to give the Senku a "floating" look that is complemented by a sleek, boldly chiselled form to create unique proportions embodying dynamism and elegance. Sharp edges and soft curves are combined to give the Senku a kind of beauty with deep emotional appeal.

A body colour called Ingot Silver gives the Senku a look that is evocative of freshly cast steel. It expresses tension and elegance, in line with the "sharpness and mellowness" design theme.

The interior colour scheme is based on vividly contrasting jet black and crimson -- colours that play an important part in traditional Japanese art. The jet black conveys quietness and forcefulness while the crimson evokes passion and beauty, complemented by steel-coloured metallic materials on the centre tunnel and seat frames, creating an environment in which refinement and contemporary sportiness are harmonized.

The Senku concept car will be on display in the Mazda exhibit for the duration of the Canadian International AutoShow, which runs from February 17 through February 27, 2006.

altspace
02-16-2006, 06:54 PM
More pics and info here...

http://www.automobilemag.com/auto_shows/tokyo/0511_mazda_senku/

Newf
02-16-2006, 11:09 PM
mazda has been stealing starfleet shuttlecraft apparantly


funny, i was thinking of the same thing.