Ford and Nissan aim models at aging Baby
Boomer segment
Crossovers are hot in America. Low-riding SUVs
like the Nissan Murano and Ford Edge that
combine attributes of off-roaders, MPVs and
estates are gaining market share rapidly. Ford
believes Crossovers will account for more than 3
million sales a year in America by the end of
the decade as more an more manufacturers jump on
the bandwagon.
Now manufacturers are starting to look further
ahead to see what the next generation of
Crossovers might look like. The current cars are
aimed at younger family buyers – but as these
owners grow older, they will look for something
different. And Amereica’s population is ageing -
by the end of the decade, there will be 57
million 50- to 64-year-old consumers - a 38%
increase on 2000, according to the University of
Michigan. Ten thousand Americans turn 50 every
day.
Ford unveiled a concept Crossover called the
Airstream, designed to satisfy the growing
“wanderlust” of these consumers, often retirees
with time for travel. Airstream has been
developed jointly with the Airstream trailer
company, maker of the iconic American aluminium
streamlined caravans of the 1950s. Ford group
design vice-president J Mays said: “We’re seeing
demand for recreational vehicles.”
The Airstream is a far cry from the traditional
truck-based RV. It has a hybrid powertrain,
giving it a fuel consumption of 41mpg. It can
run for 25 miles as a pure electric car. Its
styling owes as much to Stanley Kubrick’s sci-fi
film 2001 as it does to the airstream trailers,
featuring illuminated orange window surrounds
and asymmetric doors.
A similar layout is adopted on another crossover
at the show aimed at ageing baby-boomers – the
Nissan Bevel. This car is specifically aimed at
45-60-year-old men, generally “hobbyists” or DIY
enthusiasts who want a car to carry their
“stuff” around rather than their family.
Nissan Design America designer John Cupit said
the Bevel was a “category buster”. It’s aimed at
people who don’t want an off-roader or an MPV –
it’s for “men with hobbies – handymen and
tinkerers”. Like the Airstream it has an
asymmetric door layout, with a single offside
driver’s door and wide-opening double “suicide”
doors on the nearside, plus a rear tailgate that
flips over to become a loading shelf.
Another feature is its overt ‘70s styling,
elements of which could become part of Nissan’s
design “house style” in the future, especially
the oblong grille incorporating the front
lighting, and the configurable flat-panel
dashboard.
There are no plans to build either vehicle,
though it’s good to see that manufacturers are
looking beyond the current trends. Crossovers
were only concept cars just a few years ago, so
it would be no surprise to see cars like
Airstream or Bevel as production models in the
coming years.
source: The Auto Channel