Last News of Technology and Science > Transporters > Mazda Hakaze Concept
» Mazda Hakaze Concept 2008
(February 2007)

1. Nagare Design - A New Expression of Movement
Last year Mazda wowed the show car world
with a trilogy of design concepts that were talked about on
three continents. From Europe's Sassou show car with its unique
Shoji design principle and hidden features, to Tokyo Motor
Show's Mazda Senku concept car, winner of the Grand Prix du Plus
Beau Concept Car at the XXIst Festival Automobile International
in 2006 in Paris, to North America's sports car study Mazda
Kabura, winner of the Detroit Motor Show's Aesthetic and
Innovation Award _Mazda Motor Corporation wrote another chapter
in its global reputation for eye-catching, Zoom-Zoom designing.
The new show car season features four concepts from Mazda that
express a new design language called Nagare, (pronounced
na-ga-reh) developed by Mazda's new global design director,
Laurens van den Acker. The word Nagare means 'flow' and 'the
embodiment of movement' in Japanese and applying it to car
design involved analyzing motion itself and how forces like wind
and water move in nature. Natural flow lines are all around us
_wind blowing shapes in sand, wave forms seen from above _and
are literally symbolic of movement itself. Nagare, then, is the
application of natural flow to automotive design that combines
surface language and proportion to communicate movement in a new
way.
'Through the success of the current generation of cars,
Zoom-Zoom has managed to focus our company and delight our
customers at the same time. Nagare builds on this newly regained
confidence and gives it a unique and distinctive identity', says
Laurens van den Acker.
Its first expressions were the Mazda Nagare concept car
presented last November at the LA Auto Show, and the
Mazda
Ryuga, which premiered at the Detroit Motor Show
this January. Both Mazda concepts are an evolving expression of
Zoom-Zoom, inspired by the movement of nature's elements _Mazda
Nagare's surface articulation was inspired by geological flow
patterns, and
Mazda Ryuga's side body texture
was inspired by Karesansui, or Japanese raked gardens. Both
evoke energy and lightness, translated into a beautiful language
of lines and forms that are powerful yet effortless, simple yet
strikingly seductive.
Now Nagare is coming to Europe with this season's third all-new
concept car, the Mazda Hakaze, which was designed at Mazda's
European Design Centre near Frankfurt, Germany. Mazda Hakaze is
a compact crossover coupe with roadster feel. It combines the
best attributes of three traditional types of cars. Part of its
roof is removable, which gives a feel similar to a roadster; it
is agile and fun to drive like a compact hatchback, and it has a
high hip point and interior functionality like a compact SUV. It
expresses Nagare 'flow' on the outside with sand-dune like
surface iteration, and combines these with shapes from machines
that move through water or air. On the inside, it boasts 'flowing'Nagare
forms, natural surfaces and insightful functionality to meet the
demands of adventurous lifestyles like kite-surfing.
'Nagare is expressed in the Mazda Hakaze, not only in the
iteration on the side of the car, but also in a lot of the
details,' says Peter Birtwhistle, Chief Designer, Mazda Motor
Europe.'If you look at things like the execution of the wheel
design, the spokes have a nice flow in terms of the way they
move, the way the surfaces move, the way they integrate into the
tyre design. The interior too. The basic form of the interior is
like looking at sand dunes. It's got all this movement, winds
blowing. I find that inspirational in terms of trying to find a
new way of expressing design. Of course, you have to think about
functionality. But Mazda is all about emotion. And this is
emotion.'
2. Market Inspiration- A Look at Advanced Product Planning
Cross-Functionality for Concept Development
While the new Mazda Hakaze design concept is a look into a
possible future compact crossover vehicle from Mazda, it is
nonetheless a concept rooted in reality. It meets the unmet
needs of a growing compact segment trend towards SUV-like
crossovers in Europe, making it a valid proposal, despite its
futuristic attributes. To ensure Mazda Hakaze and all upcoming
concepts from Mazda Motor Europe are not merely flights of
fancy, an Advanced Product Planning (APP) team was assigned to
Mazda Motor Europe's Research and Development (MRE) centre in
late 2004 with cross-functional team members from design,
marketing and engineering.
The APP team was responsible for the initial planning phase of
the Hakaze project. This began with lifestyle and automotive
trend research, and included spending time with 'normal'
consumers in Germany and the UK, to see exactly what kind of
lifestyles people lead, and what kind of attitudes these
customers have towards their cars. Combined with market data, it
became clear that compact SUVs _ those able to meet emerging and
more active lifestyle trends _will become more popular over the
next 10 years.
'Traditional segments in Europe are declining,'said Benno
Gaessler, Manager APP who, along with Stefan Meisterfeld,
Assistant Manager APP, was responsible for analysis and
strategy. 'What the team found was that potential customers have
emotional needs that are unfulfilled. They would like to drive a
coupe, to drive a convertible, to drive a vehicle that is
expressive. But these normally come with a very big price tag
and expensive running costs. How we can fulfil these needs is
what Hakaze is all about.'
The APP team clearly identified an overall concept that would
appeal to these kinds of customers. It should be just as agile
and fun to drive as a compact hatchback, while offering
attributes like open-top driving, a higher seating position,
more sporty driving attributes and a modern, upscale design.
'What is unique to this vehicle is that its realization was a
tightly-knit, cross-functional effort,' says Jose R.G.
Santamaria, Director of APP and Consumer Insights.'We have
engineering, planning and design professionals working together
as one group. From this point of view, Hakaze is the first of
this new and effective process of future development.'
After identifying the key attributes of the new concept, the APP
team turned the plan over to two cross-functional members of the
team - a designer and a packaging engineer. Together, they
worked to develop a vehicle concept that meets the needs of the
target customer mentioned above, while making sure it stayed
true to C-segment hatchback values. This robust process at the
beginning of development was a major asset to the actual
designers of the Mazda Hakaze, when they took over realization
of the project at a later stage.
3. Exterior Design - The Compact Crossover Coupe with Roadster
Feel
In Japanese, the word Hakaze (pronounced Hah-kah-zay) comes from
'ha' for 'leaf' and 'kaze' which means 'wind,' a fitting
combination for a vehicle that looks like it is effortlessly
cutting through the air while standing still. Mazda Hakaze has
very compact proportions. At 4,420 mm, it is roughly the same
length (+15 mm) as the Mazda3 hatchback _ which ensures agile,
sporty handling _ but is wider (1,890 mm, + 135 mm), and taller
(1,560 mm, + 95 mm) with a high seating position, a very large
glass area and large suspension travel _all attributes usually
associated with a C-segment SUV.
This insightful package is clothed in a modernistic body work
with no door handles and no mirrors _ exterior cameras replace
these _very compact proportions and flowing major feature lines
and side textures that create a muscular and taught look. Mazda
Hakaze has no B-pillar either and the rear two-thirds of the
glass roof can be taken off in two parts and stored in a
slide-out compartment in the rear bumper. Lowering the car's
four frameless windows then converts the concept into a fun to
drive, four-seat coupe with roadster feel.
Mazda Hakaze's exterior design was a cooperative effort from the
same successful duo that designed the Mazda Sassou, presented at
the 2005 Frankfurt Motor Show: Mickael Loyer, whose design was
selected this time for the final proposal, assisted by Luca
Zollino.'The design team took inspiration from sports and
outdoor activities in the wind or in the water giving the
sensation of being free and allows us to break boundaries,' says
Mickael Loyer, 'like kite-surfing, flying, diving, driving a
jet-ski or a motorbike. We were looking for shapes moulded by
natural elements, and how the wind shapes the sand is a key
element in the exterior design of this concept.'
At the front, they pushed forward the design idea of the Mazda
Sassou _with a large grille design that has chevron-shaped front
indicators and headlights _to which they added Nagare flow
lines. At the rear of the car, a unique illumination system is
used with light flowing directly into the lower part of the rear
window. Because the rear lights have flowing shapes integrated
into the design here, this creates an impression of floating
light. Mazda Hakaze's silhouette features Nagare flow lines at
the front of the door panel, with a visual link to the front of
the car created by a line falling over the top of the front
wheel well and into the side panel. These are combined with a
rising beltline extended into the hatchback door, a steeply
angled windshield similar to Mazda's crossover SUV CX-7 and a
roof line that gives Hakaze a modern body shape that integrates
the strong look of a Samurai sword when seen from the side.
All the concept's Nagare flow lines combine to visualize
movement by making it seem as if the wind itself has etched
natural flow lines into the carÅLs surface. Even when parked,
Mazda Hakaze looks as if it is moving _as if wind is blowing
over the front wheel wells, down and along the side panels and
across the bottom of the rear window.
Mazda Hakaze not only took its inspiration from Nagare natural
flow, but also from technological objects like helicopters,
speed boats, jetfighters. These are strongly related to flow and
examples of human interface to fast movement through natural
elements. The design team combined these kinds of forms with
shapes directly moulded by flow in sand and water. Examples of
this are Hakaze's glass roof cockpit and its 20-inch wheel
design. The wheels use a mixture of forms inspired by sand dunes
and propeller shapes to express flow and movement _including
extensions of the spoke design into the tyre rubber bordering
the wheel _and adds a three-dimensional depth to lend Mazda's
new show car a modern sophistication.
'The Hakaze is an agile yet tough coupe that takes you wherever
you want to go,'says Luca Zollino. 'Its design is also unique
because of the unconventional shape of its hatch. The continuity
of the beltline through the hatch allows us to close all the
volumes above it: this together with a very angled and long
windscreen enhances the compactness of its proportions.'
Exterior Colour and Materials – Nagare Surface Treatment
enhanced by 'flop' technique
Mazda Hakaze's exterior forms are combined with colours,
materials and surface treatment that also express Nagare flow. A
desert image is the source for its golden colour, reminiscent of
a desert at sunset.
'The exterior colour was selected to support the surface
language, its articulation and its texture,' says Maria Greger,
Senior Designer for Colour and Materials, 'so that the whole
surface impression is one of natural flow. We want to have a
feeling of sand. So if you look closer at the colour, you see
small particles like sand.'
The natural look to the exterior surface was further underscored
by employing a'flop'technique in the colour treatment of all
panels that are bent at an angle to form two sections with a
smooth edge between them. The paint used for such panels was
designed to give the upper part of the panel a more transparent
feel, which is created by a transparent layer over the colour.
Then the colour'flops'over towards a darker impression below the
edge, an effect achieved by additives to the paint and by a
slightly different use of particles in the paint. The final
effect is similar to a sand dune or a wave in sand, which is
lighter above and darker below.
4. Interior Design - A Natural Environment
The interior of the Mazda Hakaze is a triumph of form, texture
and functionality. Its two large, pop-up doors are keyless,
one-touch and give a wide opening into one of its four bucket
seats. Once inside, Hakaze's interior gives an intense open
feeling, even with the roof on. The windscreen extends to behind
the front occupants, creating an enormous viewing angle. The
A-pillar dives into the instrument panel just in front of the
door, making this feeling even stronger.
'Nagare is visible on the interior in the main surfaces, which
are a combination of gently flowing volumes with edges that
slowly fade away,'says Jo Stenuit, Assistant Chief Designer who,
along with Masato Ogawa, Lead Designer from Hiroshima, designed
Mazda Hakaze's interior. 'Inspiration was taken from a dune
landscape with the technical parts, like the steering column,
being pushed into the surface like a shell that is partly
covered in sand on the beach. Also the textures follow this
gentle flow of form in a natural manner. All this creates a
sensual feeling for the interior and makes sitting in Hakaze
like sitting in a natural environment.'
The interior design, and especially the instrument panel, is
asymmetrical with a strong focus on the driver. The wrap-around
cockpit features a long steering unit that gives a feeling of
sportiness and depth. It has orange-lit meters on each side of
the steering wheel _speedometer and tachometer _and in the
centre of the steering column is an LCD screen with navigation
information, images from the car's rear view and side cameras
and warning indicators _all of which give an enhanced feeling of
control to the driver. The centre of the steering wheel is
fixed, only the rim and the lower arm can rotate.
There are also unique sliding controls to the right of the
driver on the centre console, which follow the three illuminated
lines in the surface. These lines have a dune wave design to
make it easy for the driver to slide his finger up or down along
the surface. Doing so adjusts seat positions, heating, audio and
multimedia devices, with light below the surface moving up or
down with the finger. The wave strip furthest from the driver
has the controls for the car's hard disc drive multimedia system
and an LCD screen that electrically rises up and out of the
dashboard surface on the passenger side. This screen can be
turned by hand so the driver can also see it when the car is
parked.
Data can be transferred to and from the car's computer with a
personal'data shell', which is a further development of the USB
stick concept used on the Mazda Sassou design car.
It is a wireless device that allows the driver to open the car
simply by carrying it in his pocket, and also allows him to save
his personal driving settings and data from his home computer
(route, music, movies). After getting in the car, the driver
pushes the switch on the side of the'data shell'causing the
connector to pop out (in way similar to a key). This he sticks
into a designated slot in the centre console and it
automatically downloads the stored information wireless using
Bluetooth® technology and provides ignition. Once in place,
the'data shell'also functions as the gear shift lever for the
concept's automatic gearbox. Mazda Hakaze concept also has a
wireless charging pad located in the glove box (also using
Bluetooth®) to recharge the batteries of a mobile phone, PDA,
camera or MP3 player. This insightful solution does away with
annoying cables hanging everywhere, and keeps the device out of
view and safe while it recharges automatically.
All of Mazda Hakaze's seats are mounted on the centre tunnel and
are electrically adjustable, sliding fore and aft. For more room
in the boot, the rear seats slide forward with their lower
cushions under the front seats, which give ample space in the
hatch for all kinds of gear necessary for a day at the beach.
With the windows down and the top off, there is a true roadster
feel wherever you happen to be sitting in the car.
Interior Colours and Materials
'We want the interior to be a heightened touch experience full
of natural-feeling surfaces. Natural in the sense that you come
to the car and you have one impression. When you look a second
time, you see new things happening everywhere,'says Luciana
Silvares, Designer for Colour and Materials who, along with
Maria Greger, designed the colours and materials for Mazda
Hakaze.
The colour scheme on the inside of Mazda Hakaze was chosen to
enhance the natural flow forms and to underscore the car's
kite-surfing functionality. They reflect the ocean, continuing
the beach and dune theme, with the floor a dark brown, the trim,
dashboard, doors and centre panel a greenish beige, the four
seats in a deep blue. This is combined with unique texturing of
materials meant to enhance the Nagare flow strategy with natural
feeling surfaces and patterns. Many of the concept's interior
materials are grained using new Flotek® technology, which can
create different textures on a single surface. Before, materials
had to be embossed using the same repeating patterns. With this
new graining technology, the Colour and Material's team was able
to make asymmetrical and creatively-patterned surfaces that
mimic natural irregularities.
The floor, for instance, is made of soft, natural leather _great
for bare feet just off the beach _embossed in a flow pattern
with a patina of various textures and slight imperfections that
give a natural feel compared to artificially homogeneous
material like carpet. The dashboard also has a special grain
over it that feels sandy in some places and has line texture in
others, which enhances the flowing Nagare forms by making them
not only look natural, but feel natural as well.
This touch experience also extends to the seats of Mazda Hakaze,
which are made of smooth, high-tech leather with a surface
coating to make them feel similar to the material used for wet
suits, but with a higher quality. The driver's seat is
surrounded in a cocoon-like cockpit and continues the
kite-surfer appeal with wet suit stitching and badging in orange
Kanji script, while the other three seats have water droplets
printed on them for a wet and wild look. The result of all these
efforts is a very interactive, even sensual interior surfacing
where passengers can discover new touch sensations every time
they get into the car.
5. Powertrain & Chassis - Ready for Off-road Fun
The Mazda Hakaze design concept has been conceived to be
equipped with either a powerful DISI* petrol engine or a diesel
engine. The MZR 2.3-litre DISI petrol is a high-performance
turbocharged engine with direct injection that is coupled to
Mazda's active torque-split all-wheel drive transmission. This
is Mazda's latest MZR petrol powertrain technology and is an
ideal match to the adventurous and fun nature of Mazda Hakaze.
It delivers high torque and power, 6-speed sport automatic
transmission and beach-ready four-wheel drive traction.
Combined with Mazda Hakaze's aerodynamic shape and lightweight
body, the engine would not only be fun to drive, but would also
use acceptable amounts of petrol. It has MacPherson front struts
and multi-link rear suspension for agile, Zoom-Zoom handling,
whether at the beach or in the city.
Link: Mazda Hakaze Concept 2008
Reference: conceptcarz
Popular:

Dodge Demon Roadster Concept 2007

Audi Quattroflex

Maserati GranTurismo (GT) 2007

GG Quad with additional bite

Eco-Friendly Australian Concept

Embrio One-Wheel Concept

Kia reveals ex_cee'd cabrio concept

EDAG LUV Concept

Lotus 2-Eleven 2007

Aprilia Magnet: Hybrid three-wheeler with supercar performance

Toyota FT-HS Hybrid Sports Car Concept

The Most Affordable Dream Car