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Tuesday, 18 September 2018
BMW’s Vision iNext concept car is the ultimate self-driving machine
Coming
to a showroom near you for 2021, this car has a living room-like cabin
and out-there tech such as gesture control via touch-sensitive seating.
The BMW Vision iNext in its cargo-plane hideout. [Photo: courtesy of BMW]
Since 1973, BMW has used the tagline
“the ultimate driving machine.” That slogan has proven enormously
successful at branding the company’s vehicles as being for people who
love to drive. But if we’re on the cusp of an era when the cars will do
much of the driving, where does that leave BMW?
The
company is providing a glimpse of the answer in the form of the Vision
iNext, a new concept autonomous electric SUV. Earlier this week, it
conducted a press tour by flying the iNext from Munich to New York to
San Francisco to Beijing in one of Lufthansa’s Boeing 777F cargo planes,
tricked out inside to showcase the new car for journalists. The company
says that the iNext will become a real 2021 model. But it’s also
bristling with technology designed to eventually make its way into other
future BMWs—as well as models from the company’s Mini and Rolls-Royce
lines. Embedded touch-sensitive controls let you swipe the seats to control the car’s entertainment system. [Photo: courtesy of BMW]I
checked out the Vision iNext by boarding the 777F during its San
Francisco stop. Other than rotating on a platform for dramatic effect,
the car didn’t go anywhere. And its exterior, though striking, aims to
emphasize its BMW-ness over the self-driving part. (The famous kidney grille
isn’t so important for cooling given the electric powertrain, but it
comes in handy for concealing some of the sensors that the iNext uses to
see the road.) So I was most struck by the car’s interior—which is
radically different from anything I’ve seen from BMW or anyone else.If
you feel like driving the Vision iNext, you can; one BMW executive told
me that you might prefer to take the wheel for two hours of a six-hour
journey. But mostly, what the company did was rethink the car’s insides
for riding rather than driving. It says its mission was create something
owners will think of as “my favorite space,” and that it drew
inspiration from boutique hotels.
The steering wheel is the one
thing in the cabin that shouts “driving,” but even it retracts when not
in use, as do the pedals. The car has a flat floor made of wood and
turquoise cloth seating, with an organic-esque pattern, that evoke comfy
chairs (in front) and a sofa (in back). In between the front seats,
there’s a large wood/fabric surface that’s as much coffee table as
armrest. If passengers in front want to turn around and chat with
someone in the rear, they can bend back the headrest portion of their
seat for easier conversation. Front-seat passengers can bend back their seats to converse with folks in the back. [Photo: courtesy of BMW]The
vehicle dispenses with traditional gauges, buttons, and other controls
in favor of two wide-screen LCDs sitting atop the dashboard, where they
look like TV sets—there’s that hotel influence again. But BMW says that
it wants the car’s technology to stay out of your face rather than
flaunting itself, a concept it calls “shy tech.” The seating has
touch-sensitive areas that recognize gestures such as swipes; you can
scrawl a musical note to play music. And in a truly offbeat touch, BMW
uses projection to beam digital interfaces onto analog surfaces,
allowing you to do things like watch a movie on the blank pages of a
dead-tree book.How much of this will survive once the Vision
iNext is no longer a concept car—and how consumers will react to it—I’m
not sure. I’m not even positive that I buy into the concept of “shy
tech,” which actually feels like BMW showing off a bit rather than
disappearing. Still, it’s fun to see what manufacturers come up with
when they reimagine car interiors for the age of autonomy. Volvo went
through the same exercise as BMW and emerged with something that looks like the first-classs section of an Emirates flight;
other companies, I’m sure, will go in different directions. By the time
self-driving cars are everyday reality, not concept curiosities, the
industry may have settled on something that’s safe and comfortable in
ways that cars have never been.
Since 1973, BMW has used the tagline
“the ultimate driving machine.” That slogan has proven enormously
successful at branding the company’s vehicles as being for people who
love to drive. But if we’re on the cusp of an era when the cars will do
much of the driving, where does that leave BMW?
Front-seat passengers can bend back their seats to converse with folks in the back. [Photo: courtesy of BMW]The
company is providing a glimpse of the answer in the form of the Vision
iNext, a new concept autonomous electric SUV. Earlier this week, it
conducted a press tour by flying the iNext from Munich to New York to
San Francisco to Beijing in one of Lufthansa’s Boeing 777F cargo planes,
tricked out inside to showcase the new car for journalists. The company
says that the iNext will become a real 2021 model. But it’s also
bristling with technology designed to eventually make its way into other
future BMWs—as well as models from the company’s Mini and Rolls-Royce
lines. Embedded touch-sensitive controls let you swipe the seats to control the car’s entertainment system. [Photo: courtesy of BMW]I
checked out the Vision iNext by boarding the 777F during its San
Francisco stop. Other than rotating on a platform for dramatic effect,
the car didn’t go anywhere. And its exterior, though striking, aims to
emphasize its BMW-ness over the self-driving part. (The famous kidney grille
isn’t so important for cooling given the electric powertrain, but it
comes in handy for concealing some of the sensors that the iNext uses to
see the road.) So I was most struck by the car’s interior—which is
radically different from anything I’ve seen from BMW or anyone else.If
you feel like driving the Vision iNext, you can; one BMW executive told
me that you might prefer to take the wheel for two hours of a six-hour
journey. But mostly, what the company did was rethink the car’s insides
for riding rather than driving. It says its mission was create something
owners will think of as “my favorite space,” and that it drew
inspiration from boutique hotels.
The steering wheel is the one
thing in the cabin that shouts “driving,” but even it retracts when not
in use, as do the pedals. The car has a flat floor made of wood and
turquoise cloth seating, with an organic-esque pattern, that evoke comfy
chairs (in front) and a sofa (in back). In between the front seats,
there’s a large wood/fabric surface that’s as much coffee table as
armrest. If passengers in front want to turn around and chat with
someone in the rear, they can bend back the headrest portion of their
seat for easier conversation.
The
vehicle dispenses with traditional gauges, buttons, and other controls
in favor of two wide-screen LCDs sitting atop the dashboard, where they
look like TV sets—there’s that hotel influence again. But BMW says that
it wants the car’s technology to stay out of your face rather than
flaunting itself, a concept it calls “shy tech.” The seating has
touch-sensitive areas that recognize gestures such as swipes; you can
scrawl a musical note to play music. And in a truly offbeat touch, BMW
uses projection to beam digital interfaces onto analog surfaces,
allowing you to do things like watch a movie on the blank pages of a
dead-tree book.How much of this will survive once the Vision
iNext is no longer a concept car—and how consumers will react to it—I’m
not sure. I’m not even positive that I buy into the concept of “shy
tech,” which actually feels like BMW showing off a bit rather than
disappearing. Still, it’s fun to see what manufacturers come up with
when they reimagine car interiors for the age of autonomy. Volvo went
through the same exercise as BMW and emerged with something that looks like the first-classs section of an Emirates flight;
other companies, I’m sure, will go in different directions. By the time
self-driving cars are everyday reality, not concept curiosities, the
industry may have settled on something that’s safe and comfortable in
ways that cars have never been.
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