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While Mazda
has not yet officially confirmed a production model based on the
MX-Crossport, the company has clearly stated that it intends to expand
its line of new-generation Zoom-Zoom products for the North American
market and beyond. The MX-Crossport is an important conceptual step
forward in the process.
Mazda North
American Operations is responsible for the sales and marketing, customer
parts and service support of Mazda vehicles in the United States.
Headquartered in Irvine, Calif., MNAO has more than 700 dealerships
nationwide.
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Scheduled to
be shown in public for the first time at the 2005 North American
International Auto Show early next month in Detroit, Mich., the Mazda
MX-Crossport design concept represents a new direction Mazda is
considering as it works to expand its line-up of successful
new-generation products. The MX-Crossport was designed at Mazda’s main
design studio in Hiroshima, Japan, and is a crossover-type vehicle – a
very Mazda crossover combining strong styling cues from the company’s
flagship RX-8 sports car with the more practical packaging of
sport-utility vehicle.
The
powerful, bold, three-dimensional identity of the concept car was
created to be both surprising and uniquely eye-catching. It is at the
same time clearly a Mazda, however, and strong with Mazda family design
cues making it immediately recognizable. It also is a new frontier for
Mazda, leading the company into a new segment, expanding the definition
of Zoom-Zoom from both a design and packaging standpoint.
"Mazda has
momentum right now and one of our immediate challenges is to harness
this momentum and create new products that will help us strengthen our
results in the major markets around the world," stated Moray S. Callum,
design director of Mazda Motor Corporation. "I challenged our design
team to further evolve and expand our existing design DNA. The result of
this challenge is the MX-Crossport, which was designed very much with
the North American market in mind."
ADVANCED
FRONTIER DESIGN CONCEPT
Design is an
important element of all Mazda products, and, as such, the MX-Crossport
is first and foremost a design concept. It is being presented in Detroit
as a design study, not an engineering study.
Chief
Designer Koizumi, whose previous works include the successful MAZDA6,
calls this concept an "advanced frontier" for Mazda, meaning the concept
merges the speedy and athletic image of Mazda’s best sports car with the
toughness and practicality of an SUV. The result is a vehicle that takes
Mazda and its Zoom-Zoom image into an area it has never before ventured.
Chief
designer Koizumi expresses his confidence in the design by stating,
"Design language in a product like this is very important. No matter the
powertrain or the segment in which the vehicle will compete, the design
must have the same powerful Zoom-Zoom language. The cockpit has also
been designed to perfectly meet the powerfulness of the exterior
design."
"Our goal
was to design a vehicle that transcends the existing categories of SUV
and crossovers and steps into the realm of sports car. We want to let
people experience the world of sports cars every time they get behind
the wheel," Koizumi added.
Overall—as
with the exterior—the dynamic nature of the interior design was created
to communicate a visual sense of motion and speed and to test potential
design themes that could be incorporated into a production model.
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