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Frasher's odyssey: with the design of its XC90 SUV, Volvo had to navigate between the scylla of me-too trucky styling and the charybdis of station wagon wimpiness. (Design).


Arguably it has done just that.

Doug Frasher didn't want to design the Volvo XC90. It's not because he's lazy or anything like that. Rather, when the project came along, Frasher, who is the strategic design chief of Volvo's Monitoring and Concept Center (Camarillo, CA), had just completed work on the S80 sedan and was hoping that someone else would be tapped to pen Volvo's first SUV. But when then-head of Volvo design Peter Horbury Peter Horbury is a British car designer currently in charge of all design for the North American Ford, Lincoln, Mercury and Volvo brands. He was named UK magazine Autocar’s Designer of the Year in 1998 and during his 30+year career has been actively involved in the design of  asked Frasher to be one of only three people to submit a full-scale model, he realized it was an offer he couldn't refuse--a lucky thing in light of the end result.

With the XC90, Volvo faced a vexing design problem: how to make a vehicle that is both as safe and sophisticated as a Volvo sedan while injecting enough testosterone to have it accepted as a "real" SUV. When work on the XC90 began in earnest in early 1999, the V70-based Cross Country wagon was just becoming available, so Volvo had an entry in the off-road wagon segment and couldn't afford to make an SUV that looked like a taller Cross Country. "My effort was to make a design with a true, credible SUV character," says Frasher. To do that, he started with the premise that an SUV has certain immutable IMMUTABLE. What cannot be removed, what is unchangeable. The laws of God being perfect, are immutable, but no human law can be so considered.  characteristics: "A vehicle of this type has to have the high point pretty much over the C-pillar. If you move it forward and try to taper backward, which the other two concepts did, it starts to lose the 'robust utility' character. So, that was a very strong part of my basic proportion and the whole balance of the mass on top of the car."

To make the vehicle unmistakably a Volvo, Frasher relied on the styling cues he had developed for previous models off of the same "P2" platform: the S80, S60 and V70. "I created this form language way back on the Environmental Concept Car in 1991-92. So I have my little bible on what I consider it to be," he says. The most prominent feature of this form language is a decidedly horizontal "shoulder" that runs the length of the vehicle and gives a notched profile to the unique tail lights. Instead of softening this element to stay more in line with the slab-sided tendencies of most SUV designs, Frasher exaggerated it almost to the point of caricature. And in so doing, created distinct treatments for both the sides and the rear.

But the designer says that the trickiest bit was in the front of the vehicle. Volvo was determined to maintain its famous safety standards Safety standards are standards designed to ensure the safety of products, activities or processes, etc. They may be advisory or compulsory and are normally laid down by an advisory or regulatory body that may be either voluntary or statutory.  with the XC90, which meant that the front bumper area had to be stretched over a hefty crash member. To do this without making the nose of the vehicle look too long or bulky, Frasher employs two large black bumper "pads" that flank a body-colored bumper with an integrated air intake. These elements break up what otherwise might have been a huge swath of monochromatic monochromatic /mono·chro·mat·ic/ (-kro-mat´ik)
1. existing in or having only one color.

2. pertaining to or affected by monochromatic vision.

3. staining with only one dye at a time.
 plastic, and help to give the vehicle a more sophisticated, European look. "A lot of SUVs on the market tend to overplay o·ver·play  
v. o·ver·played, o·ver·play·ing, o·ver·plays

v.tr.
1.
a. To present (a dramatic role, for example) in an exaggerated manner.

b. To emphasize or stress unduly.
 the commercial truck look," Frasher opines Opines are low molecular weight compounds found in plant crown gall tumors produced by the parasitic bacterium Agrobacterium. Opine biosynthesis is catalyzed by specific enzymes encoded by genes contained in a small segment of DNA (known as the T-DNA, for 'transfer DNA') , "But I don't think that is attractive and it is not what I wanted to say with this design."

Doug Frasher's winning design For the XC90 is the latest stop on an unlikely road. In the early 1990s Frasher created a unique Form language For the Environmental Concept Car [ECC (1) (Error-Correcting Code) A type of memory that corrects errors on the fly. See ECC memory.

(2) (Elliptic Curve Cryptography) A public key cryptography method that provides fast decryption and digital signature processing.
] which he says was allowed to be shown mainly because it was so different that no one would actually expect Volvo to follow that course." But Follow it Volvo did with the S80, which Frasher describes as "a literal interpretation Noun 1. literal interpretation - an interpretation based on the exact wording
interpretation - an explanation that results from interpreting something; "the report included his interpretation of the forensic evidence"
 of the ECC as a luxury saloon," and the other cars based on the same platform. "The XC90 is yet another expression of this form language," he says. Peter Horbury, Volvo's Former vice president and chief designer describes the SUV as, "Masculine but not macho; muscular, but not aggressive." Frasher prefers to think of his design as the sophisticated James Bond in an SUV crowd that is otherwise populated pop·u·late  
tr.v. pop·u·lat·ed, pop·u·lat·ing, pop·u·lates
1. To supply with inhabitants, as by colonization; people.

2.
 by muscle-bound mus·cle·bound also mus·cle-bound  
adj.
1. Having inelastic, overdeveloped muscles, usually as the result of excessive exercise.

2.
a. Hindered by or as if by overdeveloped muscles.

b.
 Schwarzeneggers.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Gardner Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:overcoming difficult design problems for new Volvo sedan
Comment:Frasher's odyssey: with the design of its XC90 SUV, Volvo had to navigate between the scylla of me-too trucky styling and the charybdis of station wagon wimpiness. (Design).(overcoming difficult design problems for new Volvo sedan)
Publication:Automotive Design & Production
Geographic Code:4EUSW
Date:Dec 1, 2002
Words:689
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