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Car Design - From the Carriage to the Electric Car (German, Hardcover)
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Car Design - From the Carriage to the Electric Car (German, Hardcover)
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Text in English & German. If laziness is the mother of all
inventions, then the car is its masterpiece. The earliest means of
locomotion was walking, followed by riding on horses or camels;
finally, with the invention of the wheel, came the ability to use
carriages, which not only made locomotion far more comfortable but
also brought the transportation of goods to a whole new level.
However, it then took millennia for carriages to go from being
propelled by horses or oxen to engines, initially steam-driven,
then propelled by internal combustion engines and early experiments
with electric propulsion. Cars were initially the result of pure
craftsmanship, and as passenger cars were based on the concept of
the carriage. The assembly line had not entirely abandoned the
carriage look, but already showed a typical automobile profile:
equal-sized wheels, engine bonnet, passenger compartment. The
predominant body colour of cars manufactured between 1910 and 1930
was black, while all makes of car had an almost uniform appearance.
As manufacturers moved away from metal-panelled wooden frames to an
all-steel design, they hesitantly ventured to adopt new forms.
Improved undercarriages and higher engine performance were
initially limited by air resistance, which above a speed of 60
kilometres per hour is the strongest of all driving resistances.
This led to the development of new body shapes that offer less
resistance to the airstream. Engineers still determined the form of
the car, sometimes even achieving formal elegance. It was only
rarely that members of other professions, such as the architects Le
Corbusier or Walter Gropius, were commissioned to design a car.
Between the two World Wars North America had the worlds largest
fleet of cars; this also meant that their design became an
increasingly important sales factor. Professsional automobile
design was established. As they continued to develop technically,
cars in the 1950s moved further and further away from the
physically logical form of a moving body. One of the last and most
outstanding examples of a form with optimum resistance to the
airstream is the Citroen ID/DS of 1955. Others, indeed almost all,
opted for the pure symbolism of speed and power, whose most
important ingredients were tail fins and chrome. Today, with a
global annual production of close to 100 million passenger cars,
automotive style has come to be represented by a wide range of
almost every imaginable form. Architect Hans-Ulrich von Mende has
worked with partners in an independent practice since 1990. For 50
years his writings and drawings on automotive design have appeared
in books, trade journals (mot, autobild) and the daily press
(Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Suddeutsche Zeitung).
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