Look, we get it. Concept cars are designed to be daring. Theyâ€
But sometimes, just sometimes (okay, a little too often for our liking) these manifestations of unbecoming thoughts end up nothing short of utterly hideous. The guilty automakerâ€
No ad to show here.
Of course, what one onlooker deems repulsive could quite easily be described as charming or even handsome by another – which is what renders this list completely subjective. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, after all.
Be that as it may, youâ€
Letâ€
1. Sbarro Autobau (2010)
Back in 2010, Sbarro – a tiny Swiss high-performance automaker founded in 1971 – unveiled the super-strange Autobau at the Geneva Motor Show. From some angles (and probably in very poor light, if weâ€
The vehicle, which also features a blood-red interior and an outlandish clamshell door, was conceived by Franco Sbarro as “a tribute†to his racing driver pal, Fredy Lienhard – the man behind Lista Racing. If we were Lienhard, we may have been somewhat offended. Friendship over.
2. Chrysler Voyager III concept (1990)
Okay, weâ€
Thing is, when the three-axle Chrysler Voyager III concept is functioning as one lengthy 11-seater, itâ€
3. Nissan XIX (1995)
Is it a pick-up truck? Is it a chunky sedan? We think itâ€
The boxy Nissan first indecently exposed itself to the public at the 1995 Tokyo Motor Show, likely sending innocent little Japanese children fleeing in every direction. But it did have one (close to) redeeming factor: it boasted a crew cab configuration, something is has since become wildly popular in the world of pick-ups.
4. Volkswagen Colani Concept (1977)
Hold onto your hats, boys and girls, weâ€
Yes, the Colani Concept bears freakish proportions, but itâ€
5. Honda PUYO (2007)
We guess you could describe the Honda PUYO as cute and kind of friendly – if thatâ€
Interestingly, though, this little gremlin features a gel body (below the glass-line, anyway) that makes being crashed into a little more pleasant and a little less deadly. Probably. The soft body material is also eerily luminescent, which kind of creeps us out.
6. Assystem City Car (2008)
Assystem – weâ€
Offensive looks aside, this vehicle – with its wheels arranged in a diamond formation – is packed with tech, including an army of external cameras that can recognise road signs, pedestrians and traffic lights. The windscreen, meanwhile, is ostensibly capable of transforming into a liquid-crystal display linked to those very cameras. Which, rather handily, also shields the driver from public humiliation when behind the wheel.
7. Nissan Pivo (2005)
Rather unfortunately, at least three versions of the Nissan Pivo have, er, “graced†the automotive stage over the years, with the latest being unveiled in 2011. All three, including the first attempt pictured here, resemble an oversized helmet on wheels. Of course, there is method behind the styling madness. Sort of.
The original variant incorporates a 360-degree rotating cabin on a fixed four-wheel chassis, which in theory makes parking rather simple. Later versions of the battery-powered bubble position the wheels in rotating pods, rendering the Pivo even more manoeuvrable. Which is useful for parking in small spots, where other humans canâ€