Henrik Fisker, the man responsible for designing the the most beautiful car on the road (Aston Martin V8 Vantage), talks design, inspiration, materials, light, shadow, size, proportion, and more in this detailed three part interview. Here’s part two and part three.
On the cost of beauty…...a design that is beautiful – except for the manufacturing challenges – is no more expensive to make than an ugly design. There is no excuse, really, for doing an ugly design.On inspiration…
But where do I get the idea for the design? Whenever I’m awake, I think about cars. It’s not really something that’s from 9 to 4, and it’s not even exclusive to the 5 days a week; it’s 7 days a week. It’s when I drive to work, I look at cars and I wonder, “why’d they do that? I would not have done it like that.” Whenever I watch television, I always watch what cars people are driving…everything, it’s always cars. I think my inspiration just comes out of looking at cars, looking at what type of people are in cars, looking at how light reflects on the cars, that’s how I get my ideas. And I always have more ideas than I have cars to do, so I don’t think there’s ever a danger of running out of ideas. It’s more the other way around; you don’t have enough opportunity to actually put your ideas out.On perception and expectations…
One of the things I wanted to change – which is just a detail, really – is that I wanted to get away from having carpet on the doors. I felt it was really ridiculous to have carpet on the doors, just because a lot of people kick the door. I thought, “this is an Aston Martin, this is a high quality car, and the interior is like an expensive leather couch.” You don’t put a carpet patch on an expensive Italian leather couch at home because somebody might kick it. You clean it after, or you make sure they don’t kick it. So, there is no carpet on the doors of the DB9. This was an important thing to take out.
On bigger not being better…
But, I will also say that I think one of the dangers in this pursuit of perfect space is kind of like a house. The natural thing when you move between houses is you always want a bigger house – not for everybody, but I think for a lot of people. And I think we get to a point where you buy the next bigger house and you realize, “well, it’s not really that much better. It’s nice to have all this space, but it’s not really more cozy, it’s not more nice to be here, it takes a lot longer to clean up…” It doesn’t mean that it’s a better house just because it’s bigger. I think the interior space of a car is the same.On people having a hard time understanding value until they actually see it…
The natural thing, for most people, is if you ask them “do you want a bigger car,” they’ll say, “Yeah, I’d like a bigger car, I’d like a bigger space.” Nobody’s gonna say, “Yeah, I can deal with a slightly narrower car, I can handle a bit less shoulder room.” But I think reality is that if you make a truly beautiful car that maybe has the compromise that it is slightly smaller inside, people will understand and accept that. People will buy that car, because they realize, “wow that really is more beautiful, I really do like it more, and I’m buying it because of that.”
Read the rest: Part one, part two, and part three.
Shaun
on 19 Apr 07Jason,
So when do you plan to trade your Audi in for an Aston?
Justin Reese
on 19 Apr 07I’m pleased to hear you call it the most beautiful car on the road, as it remains the only car I have legitimately taken pictures of out of sheer wonder. Utterly magnificent.
Benjy
on 19 Apr 07Prettiest car on the road? Not sure about that, but certainly one of the models within the Aston line is—and this one’s top 5 for sure. And the Maseratti Quattroporte is also way up there…
Robert
on 19 Apr 07I like this one: http://www.wiesmann-mf.com/index.html
Andy
on 19 Apr 07An amazingly beautiful car. I do like the DB9 better by the way.
Tyson Caly
on 19 Apr 07Jason, I too share your thoughts… The current Aston Martin lineup are among the most beautiful cars in the world. Although, I must say, my heart still yearns for the the old DB5. A photo of Connery posing with the Goldfinger DB5 sits above my desk. I admire it every day.
On my last visit to Chicago over Christmas, I took a quick trip out to a Lake Forrest dealership to take the new V8 Vantage for a test drive. It roars like an rocket. The experience was truly incredible. If you get the chance, take a day off and go admire the perfection.
Also snapped a picture in front of a DB9
Benjy
on 19 Apr 07I’ve often tought about his comment about good design and cost. The unit cost for mass production vehicles could be so low, that I don’t understand why the lower end brands don’t emphasize that more. Particularly those lacking on other areas. How many people would pay a premium for an equal product or pay the same for an inferior product if it was attractive?
I’d also like to see his thoughts on true design excellence, versus design “hooks” or gimmicks. It’s seems similar to some ideas in an article I once read about why Heinz ketchup is the perfect food and thus no gourmet ketchups catch on like in the mustard category. Cars are similar—a 20 year old Aston looks as good as a new one. Same with a Jag. But then consider cars like the Aztek, PT Cruiser, new Thunderbird. They got press/sales early on (well… not the Aztek) but quickly aged and became much less popular as the novelty wore off.
Jon Vaughan
on 19 Apr 07Check the long term tests in evo (below). I’m not saying they didn’t like it, but, I quote
“So that’s two full breakdowns and five further problems, plus the fact that AU55 arrived with a number of shoddy detailing faults. Wholly unacceptable in any car, let alone one at this price and supposed status level.” (in 9 months)
Not an example of great design. Not to mention the “one incredibly naff feature. After turning on the ignition, the info screen … scrolling through the words ‘Power’, ‘Beauty’ and ‘Soul’”
http://www.evo.co.uk/carreviews/evolongtermtests/63982/aston_martin_v8_vantage.html
http://www.evo.co.uk/carreviews/evolongtermtests/64995/aston_martin_v8_vantage.html
http://www.evo.co.uk/carreviews/evolongtermtests/202705/aston_martin_v8_vantage.html
JF
on 19 Apr 07Jon, lemons exist.
Security
on 20 Apr 07That is certainly one of the most graceful cars ever -
the photograph of that ultra modern car in a medieval like neighborhood is almost transportingly beautiful
I'll take 2
on 20 Apr 07Get it while it’s hot.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/2007-ASTON-MARTIN-V8-VANTAGE-1-OWNER-LOCAL_W0QQitemZ230119666402QQihZ013QQcategoryZ5358QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
Sebhelyesfarku
on 20 Apr 07It’s butt ugly.
Testing Testing
on 20 Apr 07Pity Aston’s Quality Control Dept. doesn’t match the excellence of it’s Design Dept. Based on the experience of some friends of mine the cars seem to spend more time ‘being fixed’ than being driven!
freaktopia
on 20 Apr 07good god people! i leave to travel the world for a few years, come back to see what’s happening with my favorite self-important web design blowhards and they are posting about cars?
are all of your camping website tools doing that poorly? have you given up on web design entirely? or perhaps after all these years you’ve finally realized you have nothing important to say?
say it ain’t so, man! what web deisngers will i make fun of now! it’s such a cruel cruel world…
Justin Reese
on 20 Apr 07Embarrassingly, I just realized I was wrong… the DB9 is the car that I was floored by “in person”. I haven’t yet seen one of these V8 Vantages.
Clearly I’m a car guy.
WD
on 20 Apr 07Henrik Fisker says, “So, there is no carpet on the doors of the DB9. This was an important thing to take out.”
Funny, my Infiniti M45, my Jeep Wrangler, my wife’s Mitsubishi Lancer, and my ‘rents Acura MDX are all missing carpet on the doors as well. It was an important thing to take out 15 years ago, but now Aston Martin is just catching up.
As for the rest of the car, (and yes, I’ve driven a vantage) I’ve seen more ground breaking designs come out of Detroit.
Anonymous Coward
on 20 Apr 07I’ve seen more ground breaking designs come out of Detroit.
Designs are one thing, production is another. Which Detroit “ground breaking designs” can you buy today?
detroit rock city
on 20 Apr 07buy today?
Corvette or Viper
buy in the past?
GTO or TransAm
buy in the future?
Challanger or Camaro
Anonymous Coward
on 20 Apr 07You think the Corvette or Viper are “ground breaking designs”? To each their own I guess.
detroit rock city
on 20 Apr 07“ground breaking design” = design that is unrivaled or delves into new territory
The Viper restarted the american muscle car movement. The designers removed standard luxuries from the car, the engineers widened the wheel base beyond the norm, the executives made the call to build a sports car based on a heavy duty truck engine. All those design elements went against the grain.
The C6 Corvette is the pinnacle of sports car engineering and offers the most horsepower or the least dollars of any vehicle on the road. The original Corvette design (of which the current retains many elements) changed the way sports cars worldwide are styled AND continues to be an icon of american opulence.
Jake Stride
on 21 Apr 07I think the Alfa Romeo Brera is one of the most beautiful cars available at the moment.
This discussion is closed.