Currently reading: Why the world needs more optimistic retro cars

Think Mini, Fiat 500, Beetle; why can't retro cars look at more optimistic eras through their rose-tinted glasses?

"Google it,” recommended a feature on the website PistonHeads, referring to the Scenicruiser GX-2 coach. So I did. And, gosh, what a thing the Scenicruiser is: a vast, splitlevel cross-state American coach, built for cruising through vaster, big-screen US scenery, in a time when roads still wove through, rather than around, towns like Radiator Springs.

What a way to travel. It reminded me of an Oldsmobile Eighty-eight I saw on the M6 the other week, dominating the lane in which it sat, with O L D S M O B I L E written large across the rear because, well, with that amount of metallic real estate on offer, why wouldn’t you use it?

They’re both evocative designs, partly because they’re both bigger than they strictly needed to be, but more so because outwardly they’re so extravagant; the Scenicruiser with its shining, ribbed aluminium sides, and roof part-raised like a 40ft Land Rover Discovery; the Oldsmobile with its flares, italicised fonts and chrome measured out by the hundredweight.

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In the 1950s and 1960s, this stuff was common. The designs of the day shrieked not primarily of excess, mind; at least, not in the gaudy, accepted sense of it. They were too well styled and, crucially, too well intentioned for that.

Yes, there was a lot of metal, and it was showy, but it was a show of tremendous boldness, not wealth. It reflected a marvellous kind of optimism. The reflective aluminium surfaces and big flared wings and curved glass areas gained their inspiration from the rapidly developing aerospace industry. It was progress, not money, that this kind of Americana represented.

Maybe that’s not surprising, given how hard the country had been hit in previous decades. After the Great Depression came the ravages of war and, once you find peace – of a sort – at last you find hope: people didn’t have loads of money but they had experienced phenomenal technological advances. Tomorrow, then, we go supersonic, and the day after that, we go to the moon.

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Does product design reflect such extraneous external factors? I think so. This week, I spoke to a French car designer who put the French’s continuing predilection for de-badging expensive cars and love of battered small hatchbacks at the hands of the French Revolution. It doesn’t pay to stick your head too far above the parapet.

And if design reflects society, what do today’s designs say about us? Today, because most car makers build vehicles properly, design has never played such a big part in car buying. And yet so much of it is boring, bland, ‘meh’ and safe.

Now, I’m not big on nostalgia. The world’s a much better place now that we’re curing diseases, we don’t have to use a mangle and the imminent threat of a nuclear apocaly… well, anyway. I’m not sold on nostalgia.

But it seems to me there was a time when, for the first time in decades, the future looked brighter, not darker. When we looked to the horizons, the skies and the stars. Yet today, when cars do retro, they do the meagre bits: the Mini, the Fiat 500, the Volkswagen Beetle; cars born from pragmatism.

I think I’m yearning for a retro car design that rediscovers optimism. The Space Race. Supersonic flight. Rock and roll. Although I do fear I’ve just advocated the Chrysler PT Cruiser.

Read more: 

Chrysler PT Cruiser Convertible GT review

Groundbreakers: the cars that did it first

Why a Seat heritage model needs to happen

Matt Prior

Matt Prior
Title: Editor-at-large

Matt is Autocar’s lead features writer and presenter, is the main face of Autocar’s YouTube channel, presents the My Week In Cars podcast and has written his weekly column, Tester’s Notes, since 2013.

Matt is an automotive engineer who has been writing and talking about cars since 1997. He joined Autocar in 2005 as deputy road test editor, prior to which he was road test editor and world rally editor for Channel 4’s automotive website, 4Car. 

Into all things engineering and automotive from any era, Matt is as comfortable regularly contributing to sibling titles Move Electric and Classic & Sports Car as he is writing for Autocar. He has a racing licence, and some malfunctioning classic cars and motorbikes. 

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Andrew Lee 6 October 2017

Past my bedtime

I meant the next (Fiat) 500. And that Oldsmobile (circa 1960?) seems like a transitional shape, combining late 50s exuberance with a cleanly-styled/early 60s glasshouse. I must check my Observer's Book Of Automobiles!

Andrew Lee 6 October 2017

Hope

A stimulating subject. But fundamentally I agree that optimism should shape future car design... Please, no more ugliness of the latest Mini/Beetle (and probably 500) variety. I feel very conflicted about car design: to a large extent I feel people should in future move around in self-driven electric pods. Cars should be seen as appliances, like any other modern device. How these would be individually styled is anybody's guess! But at the same time I'm fixated by cars I remember from my childhood, above all American designs. The 'optimism' of 50s styling was actually based on very macho/sexist attitudes (above all at GM). Cadillac 'fenders' were seen as women's breasts as much as missiles. But aggressive jet aircraft imagery was a very powerful source of inspiration. Ironically this was the era that - thanks to a developing paint industry - gave the world pastel pink cars! After the bonkers excess of the '59 GM models above all, the 60s brought us shapes that were calmer, cleaner and often timelessly beautiful. (Of course I've left out the equally beautiful Italian shapes of these decades). So where does this leave us now? In an almost totally conformist era. Conservatism caused by the massive sums needed to produce new models. And Audi providing the template for frontal styling almost across the board: large/hexagonal grille, narrow squinting lights... My hope would be that large glass areas/slim pillars/clean 'unsculpted' metal might return - in the near future.       

Harry P 6 October 2017

Futuristic not Retro

Surely we need optimistic futuristic designs not retro?   The examples shown here were certainly built at a time with forward thinking futurism at the heart of their designs and the optimism that very soon we would be closing the door of our car or stepping on board a bus and taking to the skies or travelling to the moon.   When I sat in my father’s Ford Anglia and the lever on the dash said Hood I really did think that the roof may fold away if pulled,  Okay it only opened the bonnet, but it added some excitement to the mundane.   

What we need is manufacturers to be brave enough to develop a new class of car or ones that excites with design and are still affordable to the average man.   Ones that our children or grandchildren can sit in and believe they may be taken to infinity and beyond . 

MarkII 6 October 2017

Harry P wrote:

Harry P wrote:

Surely we need optimistic futuristic designs not retro?
... we need is manufacturers to be brave enough to develop a new class of car or ones that excites with design and are still affordable to the average man.   Ones that our children or grandchildren can sit in and believe they may be taken to infinity and beyond . 

You're right - retro design has its place, especially with re-imagining of iconic models from yesteryear but fresh, innovative design that moves things forward.

Like many here, I'd love to see a move away from the mundane and all too obvious russian doll approach across model ranges but the problem is, if (due to other design considerations like aero/safety etc) the 'wiggle room' available to designers for the freely creative element of car design represents a proportionally smaller part of what's now possible AND mainstream manufacturers play it safe with their bread & butter models, how can fresh designs that are affordable by the average man, see the light of day?

Hence my question as to whether technological advances in manufacturing will pave the way towards a more flexible & open-minded approach by the major manufacturers.