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Leverkusen, 7th February 2008. Mazda Motor
Corporation has won the coveted Grand Prix du Design at the 23rd Festival
Automobile International in Paris. Laurens van den Acker, General Manager of the
Design Division of Mazda Motor Corporation, accepted the award yesterday at a
gala ceremony held at the exclusive Les Invalides in Paris. This is the second
major design prize for Mazda at the Festival Automobile International in Paris:
in 2006, Mazda Senku was chosen “Most Beautiful Design Concept.” Another concept
car, the Mazda Ryuga, was recently awarded the prestigious Louis Vuitton Classic
Concept Award 2007 as well.
The Grand Prize for Design honours the work of a design studio or
a manufacturer, and its influence on the automotive world. Mazda’s design team
now joins an elite group of past recipients that includes some of the world’s
most influential car designers. “This award reflects creativity and hard work of
Mazda’s entire global design team. To accept it on their behalf is a great
honour for me personally,” said Laurens van den Acker.
During the last 16 months, Mazda’s international design team has
introduced five concept cars based on a new design language called Nagare. The
word “Nagare” is Japanese for “flow” and “the embodiment of movement” and takes
its inspiration from how natural forces like wind and water move in nature.
Embodied by a unique surface language, and combined with form and proportion, it
communicates movement in a new way.
Mazda Nagare concept car, for instance, (LA Motor Show 2006) has
surface articulation inspired by geological flow patterns, while the Mazda Ryuga
(Detroit Motor Show 2007) has a side body texture inspired by Japanese raked
gardens. Mazda Hakaze (Geneva Motor Show 2007) is inspired by sand dunes and
Taiki* (Tokyo Motor Show 2007) visualises the natural flow of air, while Mazda
Furai (Detroit Motor Show 2008) displays flow lines in a strongly sports car
style.
The Festival Automobile International is held annually to “pay
tribute to beauty, design and art” in the automotive industry. This year’s jury
consisted of leading figures from the sports car industry, architecture,
fashion, design, art and the media. Its Chairman is architect Jean-Michel
Wilmotte, and its members include well-known people from the design and
automotive worlds like Anne Asensio, Alain Prost and Hervé Poulain. For more
information, please visit www.festivalautomobile.com.
* Mazda Taiki will also be shown at the 2008 Geneva Motor Show
next month.
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