The "EDAG Biwak"
a Derivative Concept with the Potential of a Volume Vehicle
For this new EDAG concept car, the classic, half-rounded beetle shape
has been converted into an estate silhouette, creating extra room for
various new professional and leisure applications. As well as offering
the advantages of a marked increase in storage space and greater
headroom for the back seat passengers, the the SUV light concept also
provides more ground clearance, to enable the driver to take the vehicle
off the road or race track. Practical and stylish: the rear door
provides easy access to the luggage section. The new body design drawn
up by the EDAG stylists and developed by the EDAG engineers has the
potential for use in vehicles for volume production. The EDAG Biwak
would be the ideal second car for a family, though it could just as
easily prove popular as a stylish leisure vehicle for surfers or divers,
or even do service as a delivery truck for crafts or tradesmen. The
concept combines a multitude of requirements, making it attractive to a
broad spectrum of customers. To demonstrate the industrial feasibility
of the concept, EDAG's development and production specialists have also
worked out different manufacturing concepts for various quantities.
Trim + Colour as Marketing Instruments
Geneva Version: "Patina instead of High Gloss"
To increase its appeal to the intended target groups, the EDAG design
team have created a sophisticated concept for individual equipment and
features. Johannes Barckmann explains: "By utilising clearly worked out
colour and trim concepts, we can adapt the look of the EDAG Biwak to
appeal to the various target groups - high gloss finish and chrome
elements for the bank clerk; crinkle finish, steel rims and denim for
the young rebel. By offering numerous alternative versions of the
extras, we can satisfy the customers' constant calls for
individualisation."
With the version for the Geneva Show, EDAG deliberately set out to
produce a provocative exterior - the EDAG Biwak look was inspired by the
spirit of the grunge movement of the early 1990s, and takes up a
successful trend in the fashion branch.
A matt crinkle finish on the ourtside combined with natural leather and
denim on the inside create a direct counterpoint to the usual high-gloss
look of other new cars.
The crinkle finish lends the EDAG Biwak a used look, which brings the
direct utility value of the vehicle very much to the fore. "We are
giving the customer the freedom to make full use of the vehicle,
dispelling his or her worries about that first, inevitable scratch in
the paintwork," is how Johannes accounts for the provocative trim colour
concept.
In this case, the motto "patina instead of high gloss" is directed at a
target group intent upon breaking with convention. Just one example of
how colour and trim can be employed as marketing instruments.