By on October 2, 2008

Nissan’s concept cars have been pretty impressive for the past few motor shows. There was the Pivo, a toyish-but-feasible city car that had electric motors in the wheel hubs, enabling it to do 360-degree turns. It was a bubbly, friendly vision of driving in the future. Then Nissan presented the Mixim, which looked like Darth Vader’s mask on wheels. The idea was to make an urban electric car that looked serious, even aggressive. Both owed their design language to Mangas, guaranteeing a certain attractiveness to teenagers. Today in Paris, Nissan unveiled the Nuvo which is equally electric and inspired by Japanese comic books, but in addition integrates nature-oriented themes such as flowers, and recycled materials. I like it, despite its megalomaniac motto claiming it’s “the future of the city car”. Any car that sports a new design language has my sympathies. The Nuvo is a 3+1, comparable in packaging to the Toyota iQ. Nuvo is to be rolled out in the context of the Better Place pilot projects in Denmark and Israel 2011. The Nissan guy I spoke with claims the agressive style of the Mixim doesn’t work for urban drivers, so they had to go for something softer. This may be true for Japan and some countries in Europe, but otherwise I would beg to differ: Germans find cuteness alarmingly unserious, and Americans feel emasculated by anything distinctly unmacho. Still, it’s a fine design.

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11 Comments on “Blog Post: Paris Report Part 3: Nissan’s Nuvo is a Better Place...”


  • avatar
    John R

    Germans find cuteness alarmingly unserious…

    Beetle? Jetta? Um…Beetle?

  • avatar
    jkross22

    “Germans find cuteness alarmingly unserious…”

    Mini??

  • avatar

    that’s not a car. that’s a giant gumdrop

  • avatar
    JJ

    *cough* yikes *cough*

    The Lamborghini Estoque looks great on the new pictures by the way…The early ones really didn’t do the car any justice.

    I’d easily take one over the stretched DB9 (although it too is still beautiful) or the stretched 911 (not so beautiful) or whatever Bentley has to offer currently.

  • avatar
    Redbarchetta

    Strange, very strange. The lights are too goofy for me.

  • avatar
    arapaima

    That looks like it has blind spots the size of Rhode island. That and it’s really ugly, it’s probably just my tastes, but I don’t think these small cars have any hope of finding good looking proportions.

  • avatar
    50merc

    “inspired by Japanese comic books”

    Sure hope they keep those comics out of the hands of children.

    “it’s a fine design”

    As an example of how Salvador Dali would have designed a car.

  • avatar
    Samuel L. Bronkowitz

    Why does small always have to mean ugly?

  • avatar
    Casual Observer

    This is the future of cars? I hope my time machine is completed before these things hit the streets. Those monstrocities from the 70’s are looking pretty good right now.

  • avatar
    joeaverage

    Reminds me of the GEM (Chrysler) Pea-pod.

    Go for it. Build it. See if anyone will buy it.

    Oh – this is a concept car? Oh – forgot. They seldom ever get built. Even the good ones.

    I’m really only interested in the car show vehicles that are really reaching the market.

    How about skipping the concept cars and have all these companies revealing new products they are actually taking deposits for?

    Maybe we’d all notice how much of the same new cars can though if we weren’t distracted by concept cars.

    Not trying to be a grump – just saying most products are really good and we’re down to differences in details.

    Now if somebody would release cars that were from the 30s down to their side opening hoods then we’d be talking different. Won’t happen I suppose b/c retro is a tough one to pull off year after year.

  • avatar
    Usta Bee

    This thing makes the Yaris look pretty good.

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