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If there is a car that is going to mark the 1997 Geneva Motor Show for setting a
new styling trend this is the Pininfarina Nautilus. A very exotic four door, four seater,
sport sedan with great charisma, a strong design character and a unique style.
"After a phase through which it was difficult not to adjust to the bio-design trend, car design hasn't any strong reference and there is a great freedom to look for new and individual aesthetic proposal", comments Ramaciotti. Clearly, Nautilus is born from this newly found freedom and, unlike most of Pininfarina's recent research cars, it is more a dream-car than a "concept car", such as the Ethos series, "Argento Vivo", Sing and Song, and Eta Beta prototypes. Listening to Ramaciotti one understands that the design objective was to answer a question that may not be fundamental but is certainly intriguing: must the stately flagships of the King Of The Hill be conservative and orthodox limousines, with classic, neutral and rational style or can they have the allure and style of lively sculpture. Capable of stimulating emotions and speak of dynamic elegance?
If the answer is "yes", than one might have found a way to challenge the German makers domination (with few exceptions, such as Jaguar) of the German Three. In recent years, French makers believed to have found a way; with the Renault Safrane,
the Citroen XM and the Peugeot 605 but they did not really made it. Pininfarina's answer to the "if" and "how" the Germans can be successfully challenged, is very encouraging and, as far as it style goes, it is convincing. With some exaggeration we would say that they are opposing a generation of Carl Lewis to an old and well established class of Sumo players. The body style of Nautilus is new, is solid, is elegant and expresses a strong sense of quality. It is original, even though the subject of a "luxury, high performance, sport sedan" was tackled and superbly developed by the 12 cylinder 1980 Ferrari Pinin project. That 1980 Pinin and this 1997 Nautilus share the classic architecture of a four door, four seater, sedan and the overall dimensions of a large car, but speak two very different styling languages. Other major differences include the chassis and powertrain. Nautilus is a running
prototype
The silhouette is, no question about it, sleek and very dynamic, yet the cabin is very comfortable. Once the proportions have been set, the overall sculpture have been modeled to convey a
strong sporty image. How they did it? The car itself tell it all. Starting with the long
bonnet, which central part dramatically hangs over the front axle as to bring forwards the
Peugeot symbol as to announce the arrival of a king. This area is of great interest not only for its "structured shape", its crisp, headlight and its physical dimensions but also because it does with no doors (integrated into the pillars, just above the waistline), without conventional rear view mirrors (replaced by a video camera) and the doors take a major importance, as they wrap the lower structure.. To provide a strong feeling of protection (that looks to be real) to the passengers and limit the "fragile" but heavy glass area. The risk here is to reduce the sense of lightness inside the car (as delivered by the Audi TT) but this does not appear to be the case. Courtesy, of the roof colored glass roof.
We leave to pictures and captions to describe the car in detail, for both the exterior and interior design. Here. we have to stress the reasons for the rather peculiar combination of material and colors for the cabin, which serves different purposes but primarily that of "communications". We are not just referring to the TLC (telecommunication) equipment fitted (or to be) inside the car but primarily to stresses the designer's "user suggestions". I According to Ramaciotti, "the concept that inspired the passenger compartment and
guided the design of the interior refers to the type of use that a car of its class can be
earmarked for: a sports car driven by its owner, or a chauffeur-driven limousine." At first sight the concept sounds intriguing and attractive but in the reality of the Nautilus the outcome is not fully convincing. There is a lack of harmony inside the cabin and hence a feeling of disorientation. In few words a wonderful opportunity for designers to refine a concept, and work at an area where there still is a lot of room for improvements. . Is this a merciless critic? Not at all. Just the rational observation of a research project that, as such, finds out about solutions or, on the contrary, shows that certain ways are not as good (or have not been implemented as well) as originally intended and anticipated when the project was launched. Probably the best performance of Nautilus is that if fully succeed in being that poetic
automobile, reflecting the emotional and optimistic romantic science described in his
books by Jules Verne, the French author who dreamed and described a future that has became
true.
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