Six Star Magazine Six Star Magazine Spring/Summer 2005 | Page 10

INTERVIEW a new direction PHOTO: NOBUYUKI KOBAYASHI Andreas Zapatinas, Chief Designer of the 2006 Subaru B9 Tribeca W hen talking about his team’s latest and most important creation, Andreas Zapatinas, Subaru Advanced Design’s Chief Designer, has a wish list. “I hope the 2006 Subaru B9 Tribeca speaks excitement,” he says, gently running his hand along the vehicle’s boldly shaped front fender. “I hope it speaks to originality and innovation,” he adds. “I hope it also speaks to excellent quality, good taste and good engineering.” The Subaru B9 Tribeca takes Subaru in a new direction. It establishes a dynamic and immediately recognizable design that is “all Subaru.” Performance, safety and driving pleasure are all here. They are the fundamentals of what makes a Subaru a Subaru. But this new Subaru design goes even further. The 2006 Subaru B9 Tribeca represents a new direction for Subaru. In designing the Subaru B9 Tribeca, Zapatinas’ challenge was to build a premium global brand based on the core strengths of Subaru technology, but led by new and innovative design. “Good design is all about proportions,” Zapatinas says with a smile, “and about expressing the personality of a brand and the company heritage.” 10 “The Subaru B9 Tribeca is the new flagship for the Subaru line-up,” says Norio Osakabe, President, Chairman and CEO of Subaru Canada, Inc. “It combines a bold new design with the trademark Subaru symmetrical full-time All-Wheel Drive system. And it’s our first vehicle to accommodate up to seven passengers.” “We are going in a whole new direction with this design,” Zapatinas says. “The vehicle has a great personality of its own. We don’t want to hide the vehicle’s personality; we want to show it. At the same time, we want to combine our heritage and also go beyond the boundaries of our traditional frameworks. This is a great challenge.” A challenge made even more difficult now that consumers have become acutely aware of styling. Consumers, in seeking vehicles that express individuality and good, even bold taste, are reacting to a number of marketplace trends. “Good design is all about proportions” During the past three decades, the number of automotive nameplates in the market has exploded from less than 150 to more than 260. This fierce competition has put greater emphasis on the design studios of every automaker. After all, head-turning style is a sure way to get noticed. These and other marketplace developments, as well as Subaru’s goal of being recognized as a premium global brand, have made style a much bigger issue at Subaru. “In the past,” Zapatinas says, “greater priority was given to improving the function of Subaru vehicles, an approach consistent with Subaru’s decades-long commitment to advanced automotive engineering.” Heading down a new road “The new design direction at Subaru,” Zapatinas says, “reaches deep into Subaru’s individuality to create ‘drivers’ cars’.” “Subaru has always pursued advanced technologies, the proactive features of a ‘driver’s car’, as well as space-saving packaging and simple, lean forms,” says Zapatinas, who also notes Subaru’s heritage in aircraft manufacturing and its unique dedication to both AWD and horizontallyopposed SUBARU BOXER engines with their low centre of gravity and balanced performance attributes. The design of the Subaru B9 Tribeca encapsulates these core attributes and communicates them through every purposeful curve. “We are drawing on our aircraft heritage,” Zapatinas says. “In the Subaru B9 Tribeca, All-Wheel-Drive is, for example, expressed in the wheel arches. Look how tight they are to the body. The boxer engine is expressed in an SUV with a low stance. Our aircraft heritage is expressed in how very aerodynamic the vehicle is. We are trying for functional beauty.” Designing from the inside out Equally important to Subaru’s new design are the interiors. According to researchers at J.D. Power and Associates, interior quality ranks high with consumers and has become a new competitive battleground. Zapatinas says the new Subaru design direction is placing tremendous emphasis on quality and functionality for all Subaru interiors. That means the designers are paying close attention to surface finishing, including the graining of interior pieces and the degree of gloss allowed. The designers are also developing top-grade materials, paying attention to minimizing the size of the gaps between panels as well as aligning surfaces properly and matching the colours of adjacent surfaces to create a consistent, high-quality look and feel. “This is a very exciting time for us at Subaru,” Zapatinas says. “We have a company with a strong identity and precise goals, so this is a great brand for a designer to work with.”