Published: October 27th, 2006
Tags: Awards Interior Motives Design Awards Interior Motives Design Awards 2006
Now in their fourth year, the Interior Motives Design Awards have become a crucial part of the car design industry’s calendar. They are open to students from any recognised graduate or postgraduate course, anywhere in the world. This year’s event saw more than 650 students from leading institutions in 68 countries respond to the call for registrations.
The Interior Motives Best Overall Automotive Interior Design for 2006 (sponsored by Faurecia) has been won by Iman Maghsoudi of the Azad University, Tehran, Iran.
Maghsoudi’s dramatic design represents a vision of the future in which the considerations of space and resources will impact on the way people drive. In order to retain the exhilarating feeling of driving, Maghsoudi’s car features an extended front wing that lifts the nose off the ground at high speeds so that it is as much flown as it is driven.
The holistic scope of the design has been recognised, with Maghsoudi also winning the Best Conceptual Interior (sponsored by Faurecia) and Best Conceptual Exterior (sponsored by ICEM), as well as achieving a runner-up position in the Best Innovation Award (sponsored by 3M).
The design takes a number of current technologies a step further to offer an experience that is safer and more socially and environmentally aware than existing vehicles, whilst remaining focused on driver enjoyment. This pragmatic approach ensures the concept remains entirely credible as a direction in which the automotive industry could head.
The winning design and the different category winners showcase the breadth of young talent looking to join the industry. The work produced by all the finalists shows how the students have already learned the importance of creating aspirational products that take into account the social and ecological pressures that will shape the future of car making.
Other category winners
The extrapolation from current technologies for use in a more socially and environmentally conscious world was a feature of many of the other category-winning designs.
Best Innovation
The Best Innovation Award has been won by a team comprising Filip Krnja, Ehsan Moghaddampour and Jamie Tomkins from the Royal College of Art in the UK. Their design envisages a three-storey tower in 2030 Beijing which represents three levels within society and from there the group has designed three radically different vehicles to suit the values and ambitions of the tower’s occupants.
Best Use of Technology
The Best Use of Technology Award (sponsored by Volkswagen AG), meanwhile, has been won by Alexey Bykov of Ural State Academy of Arts and Architecture. His Quattroflex design uses a variety of technologies to make a fun, adaptable vehicle. Most striking is the use of a mechanism that allows the vehicle’s wheelbase to be shortened to allow easy parking or extended for load carrying.
Best Production Interior
The Best Production Interior Award (sponsored by Seton) has been won by Yvan Teypaz of École de Design Nantes Atlantique, France. He conceived of a truck cab that takes into account its role as a living space as well as workplace. The roof of the cab can be lifted when the vehicle is parked, creating a more spacious environment. Advances in technology allow all aspects of the interior, including the vehicle’s controls, to be mobile, so they can easily be stowed out of the way when the space is being used for relaxation.
Best Lifestyle Interior
The Best Lifestyle Interior Award (sponsored by Alcantara SpA) was won by Jonathan Punter, also from the Royal College of Art in London, UK. His design is based around the idea of a space that adapts depending on whether it is being used by individuals or family groups. The interior makes use of adaptable fabrics that respond to human input and offer a large degree of customisation.
Best Safety Innovation
The Best Safety Innovation Award (sponsored by Bridgestone) has been won by Matus Prochaczka, of the Slovenská technická univerzita v Bratislave in Slovakia. He envisaged a car that integrates itself into a railway network for travelling long distances. A computer ensures the vehicle travels to the correct destination and ensures that its entry onto and exit from the network is synchronised. This enables drivers to relax on long journeys, much as they would do on a conventional train, ensuring they are alert and refreshed when they have to take over control of the vehicle again.
Best Personalisation
Juan Carlos Catano Cano from Umeå Institute of Design, Sweden, has won the Best Personalisation Award (sponsored by Flotek). His winning design incorporated flexible seating to allow the interior to be altered to match the user’s preferences and also includes organic light-emitting diode panels that decorate the interior to match the owner’s preferences and moods.
Best Eco Design Concept
Best Eco Design Concept (presented by Interior Motives), has been won by Chen Yu and Yuan Xiangfei from the University of Science and Technology Beijing, China. Their Migo concept of individual taxicab proposes a selection of space saving ideas. Taking inspiration from the way shopping trolleys fit together, the Migo pack together tightly in taxi ranks with the front of the queue always ready for use. Automatic navigation negates the need for a trained cab driver, even if the user is unfamiliar with the city.
more information at www.interiormotivesawards.com