2010 Bertone Pandion
The Italian maker Bertone unveiled the Pandion concept car today at the Geneva Motor Show. The concept pays tribute to Alfa Romeo’s centenary and its name comes from the animal world, as Pandion Haliaetus is the scientific name for an Osprey: a sea hawk that nests and lives in coastal areas. Pandion is powered by a 4.7 liter, 450 hp 8-cylinder Alfa Romeo engine.
The Pandion’s design is based on the "Skin & Frame" design language: "Skin" refers to the snake in the logo, representing the world renowned Italian excellence in beautiful, seductive forms; and "Frame" refers to the cross in the logo, representing the mechanical excellence in high performance Italian race cars.
The concept’s front is defined by a sculpted sloping bonnet with typical Alfa quad headlights, a typical five horizontal bars radiator grille and doors that open by rotating backwards, ending up a perfect 90 degrees above the center of the rear wheel, lifting up the entire body side of the vehicle, from the front fender to the rear fender.
Press release after the jump.
Press release
After a two year absence from the international scene, Bertone returns to the Geneva Motor Show, unveiling a  concept car that makes its world premiere here: the Pandion, an  aggressive yet beautiful coupé designed as a tribute to Alfa Romeos’ one  hundred year anniversary.
The Pandion: an extreme and controversial sports car in typical Bertone  fashion. The size of the concept car (4620 mm in length, 1971 mm wide,  1230 mm high, 2850 mm wheelbase) offers a compact sports car external  dimensions with a large sports car interior feeling, all powered by a  4.7 litre, 450 CV 8-cylinder Alfa Romeo engine.
The Pandion is the first car produced by Mike Robinson in his new role  as Design and Brand Director at Bertone. A pure ‘dream car’, the Pandion  takes its rightful place as a member of Bertone’s historic Alfa Romeo  family: cars that have always been style icons, influencing the history  of the automobile and Italian craftsmanship in their excellent design  quality, proving themselves to be undisputed benchmarks for the entire  world of car design.
The name comes from the animal world, as Pandion Haliaetus is the  scientific name for an Osprey: a sea hawk that nests and lives in  coastal areas. The designers, led by Mike Robinson, have drawn  inspiration from the wings of this predator to invent the spectacular  door opening mechanisms, and from the hawks’ facial markings to project  the traditional Alfa family feeling into the next era of design.
In almost a century of Bertone tradition, it is not the first time that  natural wonders have inspired the names of concept cars. Just think of  the Corvair Testudo (1963) and, by no coincidence, the Alfa Romeo  Canguro (1964), Carabo (1968) and Delfino (1983).
Design: the initial concept
The Pandion’s taut and muscular body is the result of an  original interpretation of the Alfa Romeo badge, where the man-eating  snake depicted there represents the attraction of elegance (what we call  the ‘Skin’), and the aristocratic cross symbolises the rigour of  rational thought, the technological aspect (what we call the ‘Frame’).  According to this interpretation, the Pandion’s design is, like every  Alfa Romeo, a perfect synthesis between ‘Skin and Frame’, an ideal  balance resulting from a tension between opposites: technology and  sensuality, rationality and instinct, architecture and sculpture,  structuralism and organicism, industrial excellence and excellent  craftsmanship.
The design of the Pandion is based on a concept Robinson calls: "Skin  & Frame” - a new interpretation of the inherent duality in the 100  year old Alfa Romeo logo. “Skin” refers to the snake in the logo,  representing the world renowned Italian excellence in beautiful,  seductive forms; and “Frame” refers to the cross in the logo,  representing the mechanical excellence in high performance Italian race  cars. The combination of the two has now become a dynamic dial searching  for an ideal balance resulting from the tension between opposites:  technology and sensuality, rational and emotional, architectural layout  and sculptural form, structural and organic, industrial excellence and  artisan excellence.
According to this interpretation, the vibrant energy in every Alfa Romeo  is represented by Pandions’ spinal structure (or ‘Frame’), which  crosses the length of the car from the V-shaped grille in the nose of  the car to the V-shaped bumper in the tail of the car, crossing the  interior as a visually aesthetic structural element which supports the  surrounding shell (or ‘Skin’).
Design: details that count
The Pandion’s front end features a long and sculpted  sloping bonnet that creates what is, to all intents and purposes, a  mask, almost like the helmets worn by ancient warriors. The Alfa Romeo  ‘family feeling’, immediately recognizable at first glance, does not  admit even a hint of retro nostalgia and looks to the future with a  revolutionary and novel elegance. There is no doubt it’s an Alfa Romeo  with a look that has never been seen heretofore. The typical Alfa quad  headlights are buried deep in the outer-most tips of the T-shaped  grille, highlighting the wide stance of the impressive coupé. Four white  bars of light strike the observers’ curiosity, two position lights  above and two fog lights below, creating a virtual bi-plane of light at  night. The
typical five horizontal bars on every Alfa Romeo radiator grille are  just visible here, offering a reference to the marque’s historic  identity. The front grille is full of thousands of tiny intertwined  blades which contribute to the new Algorithmic Design throughout the  car.
The Pandion has the profile of a true sports car, with no room for  compromise. The architectural layout is ‘cab rearward’, meaning the  passenger compartment is positioned towards the rear of the car and the  long bonnet pushes the car’s visual centre rearward. The body side  visually connects the sensuous front end with the razor-edged rear by  means of an extremely long flowing side window which stretches from  front wheel arch to rear, enhancing the excellent accessibility of this  low-bodied sports coupé. Since sports cars are traditionally difficult  to get in and out of, this important ergonomic activity has been  facilitated with an extra wide door opening to make up for the low  roofline. This new graphic formula not only adds a striking new visual  division between the upper and lower parts of the body, but it also  offers an incredible panorama window for passengers inside. The strong  diagonal dark-light division in the rear of the side view accentuates  the powerful rear wheel drive layout and draws special attention to the  hidden door opening mechanism.
The rear end features a striking array of crystal-like blades which are  intertwined in various widths and lengths, protruding out into space.  The rear of the car in fact has a disembodied or “pixilated” look,  representing a tail-of-the-comet metaphor, as if the sheer speed of the  vehicle is pulling the underlying, technical “Frame” rearward, away from  the sensuous, flowing “Skin” above. This “dematerialization” phenomenon  of the car is generated by the intrinsic motion of the form, which  means the car looks like it is moving even when it is standing still.
There are also two small fixed white shields below the rear bumper which  hold the quad tailpipes, creating a visual continuation of the white  side panels which seem to wrap around under the car.
The taillights are fully integrated into the organic tangle of the  blades and disappear when turned off. The new Alfa Romeo family feeling  is again visible in the rear of the car with same V-shaped bumper found  on the front of the vehicle, which the travels the entire length of the  body, forming a powerful virtual, Alfa Romeo backbone.
The doors, as in many other Bertone-designed masterpieces (such as the  1968 Alfa Romeo Carabo, the 1970 Lancia  Stratos 0, the 1972 Lamborghini Countach, and the 2007 Fiat  Barchetta), open in a visually striking manner. Virtually hinged around  the axis of the rear wheel, the Pandion doors open by rotating  backwards, ending up a perfect 90 degrees above the center of the rear  wheel, lifting up the entire body side of the vehicle, from the front  fender to the rear fender. When fully open they are more than 3.6 metres  high. This spectacular solution is design mainly for glamour, bringing  back the “wow” factor to today’s lackluster automotive industry. This  futuristic door mechanism also has a pragmatic side as well. Since all  ‘extreme’ sports cars are literally impossible to get in and out of, the  Pandion is designed to utilize the horizontal space in the car since  the vertical space is so limited. In the event of an accident that  results in a ‘roll-over’, the doors detach from the car body so that the  passengers can exit of the car.
The interior: minimalist glamour
The shapes that make the Pandion spring to life are the  result of a design study aimed at creating an organic whole, without  resorting to short-cuts to ensure continuity between the interior and  exterior, a perfect balance between architectural rigour and the  spectacular shapes of living organisms.
The design language used to create the passenger compartment has  resulted in a fluid environment, due to the fittings that seem to have  grown spontaneously, without ever having been either designed or  constructed. We have named this expressive code, never seen before in  the automotive sector until today, algorithmic design. The concept,  taken from the world of mathematics, indicates an organic alternative to  traditional design and is the ‘propagation of random forms’. It is as  if the design were following a kind of complex development which is  neither linear nor geometric, generating an ‘auto-organising’ shape,  with the ‘spontaneous growth’ of algorithms such as ‘swarms’ or ‘vines’.
When observing the interior of the Pandion, the first things that draw  our attention are the front seats. The car’s layout is typical of Alfa  Romeo coupés, i.e. 2+2. While the two rear seats are the classic ‘extra  spaces’, the front seats are two incredibly thin (30 mm) ergonomic  chaise longue chairs. They have carbon fiber shells (that mimic the  style of the car’s exoskeleton or ‘skin’) covered in Technogel® and  backlit with reLIGHT® fabric, that conforms to the shape of the driver’s  or passenger’s body. The principle that inspired the designers was that  of ‘zero gravity’, i.e. a warm and welcoming environment that would  convey a sensation of enhanced quality of life inside at first sight,  but… with zero gravity.
In fact, all the furnishings inside the passenger compartment all tend  to float visually, suspended in the magic of the blue light. Behind  these minimalist choices however lies a careful study of ergonomics: the  seats are the result of a perfect synthesis between high performance,  flexibility and lightness. The clear floor is illuminated in the same  “swimming pool blue” color of the seats, offering a spectacular visual  continuation of the voluptuous seats, with its’ flowing contours where  the driver and passenger can feel protected in a truly glamorous shell.
The steering wheel is clearly that of a sports car, while the controls  are similar to those of Alfa Romeo race cars, with two analogue dials  placed directly on the steering column. Three of the four LCD screens  offer a rear view inside the passenger compartment (two on the sides,  one on the windscreen) and they are directly connected to the external  video cameras that substitute the rear view mirrors normally placed  outside the car. The larger screen placed in the centre (9”), in the  middle of the console – and within reach of the passenger as well as the  driver – also displays information on the car’s systems (air  conditioning, sound systems, Sat Nav, etc…).
Conclusion
‘We are walking in the footprints of giants.’ That is  the Bertone company motto. The giants referred to are Giovanni and  Nuccio Bertone. However, following in their footsteps does not mean  copying them, on the contrary. It means applying their teachings and  using them as guidelines for further advances. We ask our designers to  follow a total creative method, where they observe phenomena that are  apparently unrelated to each other and try to apply them to the  automotive world.
However design research is not enough. At Bertone we study concepts, and  therefore each design is the result or a spinoff of an innovative idea  or a new phenomenon. Mike Robinson, Design & Brand Director at  Bertone, comments: ‘Cars are like films: they must tell a story to win  people over. The best car designers are necessarily excellent narrators  and their products, whether they are concept cars or mass-produced  products, reflect their creators’ ability to gather fascinating ideas  from every field, from all over the world, to bring them together and  transform them into new and great stories. This is what we have  attempted to do with the Alfa Pandion.’<   
 
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