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Imagination is the birthplace of good design. Shapes, curves, and edges are formulated inside an artist’s mind before spilling onto a sketchbook page and taking shape as an automobile. The Royal College of Art in
aims to nurture this within its mobility students. In a recent project, vehicle design students of the MA Intelligent Mobility program brainstormed how
would transpire in physical form. The challenge asked, “What will British luxury mean in 2050?”
In total, 24 designer hopefuls
to a judging panel of RCA teachers and members of the
design team. These same teachers also helped the students throughout the process. Of the 24, only four designs were plucked and highlighted, seen in the concept sketches above.
Eunji Choi’s “Elegant Autonomy,” which looks like a mesh between a luxury yacht and a grand piano, took a high-class approach to what
might look like. Jack Watson’s “Stratospheric Grand Touring,” the teardrop pod on legs, makes note that without the worry of travel difficulties, home could be literally anywhere. Irene Chiu’s “Luxury Soundscapes,” seen from the overhead and cockpit views, reimagines a car’s cabin as a tranquil safe space.
Kate NamGoong’s “Material Humanity,” which most resembles a current-age car while invoking historic Bentley design, offers a future where the way to stand out from the crowd will be to occasionally drive a combustion engine like “the old days.” The rarity of such an engine will form a niche for craft exposed engines, much like is true of high-end watches. We think we like that one best *wink*.
The intent for the Intelligent Mobility program is to lead the proclaimed third age of
. It is meant to work toward a future of interconnected megacities, flying cars,
, and sustainable energy and materials. The biggest problem with the future? It’ll have new innovations and worse problems even the human mind not be able to imagine.
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