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Vicki Vlachakis, acclaimed Solstice designer

22K views 34 replies 21 participants last post by  RNelsonByrne  
#1 ·
DAY ONE OF A THREE-DAY SERIES

California designin'
Amid sun and surf, auto artisans are given the task of dreaming up vehicles that could save Detroit.
February 11, 2007

BY TAMARA AUDI

FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

LOS ANGELES -- It is another blindingly sunny afternoon in Malibu, and the ramshackle collection of pricey beach shops known incongruously as Country Corners brims with the rich and gorgeous. One of Britney Spears' mansions lies up a dirt lane. The bar where Mel Gibson drank himself into an anti-Semitic stupor is down the road.

At a corner table outside a café sits the classic California girl: a tall, slim, flawless blonde in white capris, a gauzy shirt and delicate gold necklaces, eyeing the Sunday crowd from behind oversize Gucci sunglasses. But nothing is what it seems in this land of manufactured illusions, even in the daylight.


The flawless blonde is a designer for General Motors. And she is doing research.

"Look there. See?" she says in an urgent whisper, nodding slightly toward a young woman striding by in slouchy boots and a tangle of layered blouses. "That look is on its way out."

At 34, Vicki Vlachakis already is an acclaimed designer; her stamp is on two of GM's recent triumphs: the Saturn Sky and Pontiac Solstice. The sleek, eye-catching sport convertibles managed to reinvigorate two GM brands as Detroit strains to avoid catastrophe.

Vlachakis (pronounced, vla-ha-kis ) is at the front of a small but increasingly influential pack of smart, young designers Detroit counts on to make it relevant to an under-40 crowd that not only doesn't much care for American vehicles but, just as troubling, has almost no loyalty to the home team.

Vlachakis, who is equally at home in the Warren Tech Center and in a strappy dress for glossy magazine photo shoots, was named by House & Garden magazine as one of America's top 50 tastemakers of 2006.

She was photographed, her tresses lilting in the breeze, in the desert behind the wheel of the Sky. "In an industry where horsepower can overpower design flair, " the magazine gushed, "Vlachakis has made a name for herself by injecting interior oomph into cars."

Part car geek, part Malibu glam girl, Vlachakis insists, "design is going to be the big thing to pull us out of this mess."

It's a mission launched by GM products chief Bob Lutz, who has restored power to designers. "They're back to basically running the asylum," Lutz said in an interview last week.

"Design is the last great differentiator in products," Lutz said. "All cars work well. They all have about the same fuel economy. They're all safe. They're all comfortable. They all have heat and air-conditioning. ... What you're left with is, 'Do I love it? Do my friends admire it? Do I feel good about myself when I drive it? When I'm sitting in it?' "

GM takes cues from the fashion industry to create more luxurious interiors. A new commercial for its Acadia SUV shows fabrics, feathers and diamond necklaces floating into the air, finally gathering to form the vehicle. Industry observers call GM's new devotion to design the "Lutz effect."

Emotion over engineering

"It's his return to the idea that you can't let the accountants run the place," Rebecca Lindland, a director with Global Insight, an industry analyst firm, said of Lutz. "He is our Ralph Lauren, our Givenchy. He understands that buying a vehicle is a very emotional purchase. It's really coming back to the idea that consumers want beautiful vehicles."

Design is king, and it's not only designers who will tell you so. Consumers are demanding beauty from even the most mundane products: from Target's cheap, chic cone-shaped vacuum cleaners to Toyota's belated redesign of the reliable, reliably bland, Camry.

"It used to be the accountants, then the engineers," Imre Molnar, dean of Detroit's College of Creative Studies, said of the design-by-committee approach that led to icons of mediocrity like the Lumina or such oddities as the Aztec.

While Michigan is still heavily involved in design, Detroit is absorbed in designing vehicles that will be produced and on the roads in the next few years, while the more distant future is unfolding out West. Every major automaker is represented in southern California, with advance design studios spread from the beaches of Santa Monica to the outskirts of San Diego.

Designers wax about the state's natural beauty and the inspiration they draw from its sunsets and coastline. But there are more practical reasons. An L.A. studio allows automakers to capitalize on the area's creative talent and forward-thinking tendencies. It also provides entrée into a massive consumer market and a car culture ahead of the national curve on driving trends, including fuel efficiency and environmentally sound vehicles.

The Solstice, for one, was conceived in GM's design team in North Hollywood. "I thought about the car on the Pacific Coast Highway early in the morning, the way it would look, the way it would feel," Vlachakis said.

She then spent the next few years in Detroit trying to hold on to that image as the vehicle worked its way from show car to factory floor at the Warren Tech Center.

Lutz fast-tracked the car through GM's bureaucracy to preserve the vision of the car's two young lead designers, Franz Von Holzhausen (now with Mazda) on exterior and Vlachakis on interior.

The duo met with engineers, and the result was a near-miracle in the auto industry: a car that actually bears a strong resemblance to the designers' sketch, with Vlachakis' large, rounded shapes and sleek, simple gauges left intact.

When the Solstice went on sale in 2005, GM sold the first 1,000 online in 41 minutes. By that August, when the Solstice went into production, Pontiac had orders for 12,000 more.

A year later, while most Pontiac vehicles were sitting on lots for months, the Solstice moved in less than three weeks. BusinessWeek dubbed the Solstice "Pontiac's Budget Porsche."

The Sky, released after the Solstice, is even hotter, typically selling in less than two weeks.

"Those cars do well because where else can you get a convertible that size that looks as good for that price?" said Chris Li, a researcher for a unit of J.D. Power and Associates, which tracks automotive sales. Both vehicles are large and priced in the 20s to start.

Expectations against limitations

Though it seems like an easy, logical formula -- build a cheap car that looks great -- it can be a maddening balance for an automaker. A low price often means cheap materials and fewer features, which can limit designers. And there are other pressures: political and economic imperatives demanding less oil consumption. There is also the small matter of predicting the future. What will people want in 10 or 20 years? The answer to that question is being sought in California, in guarded, password-protected design palaces. Eight foreign carmakers are headquartered in Los Angeles County, and most major automakers have advanced design studios there, with more planned for 2007. Automakers employ 15,000 in Los Angeles County, part of a thriving business that the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp. recently described as "L.A.'s hidden industry."

While Detroit toils in the earthly business of producing vehicles, designers in California operate in GM's metaphorical kingdom of heaven.

"It's useful to have some people scheming and dreaming up new ways to execute Cadillac or Chevrolet in sort of a dream factory where they don't have to worry about, can this be produced?" Lutz said. "Is there enough investment? How would the stamping guys shape this hood? We don't want them worrying about that. They are more artistically the point of the spear."

World away from Detroit

Vlachakis lives in a quiet, whitewashed condo jutting out of the Malibu hills. From a balcony, she can see a blue corner of the Pacific and breathe in the low-hanging, green-mountain mist. Detroit seems like a far-off planet of cold and concrete.

Inside, bright, whimsical plastic toys sit on shelves. Dolce Vita black strappy sandals lie crookedly on the floor. Her fashion-forward grasp of the cultural zeitgeist has proven a vital asset to GM.

Vlachakis grew up 50 miles east in Pasadena. As a 12-year-old, she was a popular girl who preferred to sketch cars on the back of her notebooks.

By the time she finished high school, she had fallen in love with automotive design and enrolled at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, the only woman in her graduating class. Vlachakis said she has been encouraged by GM to maintain her youthful vibe in an industry that hasn't always celebrated change.

Vlachakis walks into one of her favorite spots, a Malibu shop called Madison, where celebrities are spotted and trends are born. She picks up a Marc Jacobs silver-hued, teardrop handbag and runs her hand over it. "The metallic look is softening. See how the coloring here is not harsh but soft and tempered? See how the shape is simple? We're seeing simpler, softer shapes."

Shapes that are found in the swirling circles of the Solstice.

"People want something expressive and sculpted," she said, referring to the vehicle's melting, swooning curves.

Take a toaster, she says. It's no longer enough that it toasts bread. A toaster must be sleek, chrome and complement your sleek, chrome food processor. The Treo smartphone Vlachakis keeps on the passenger seat of her Solstice, she notes, is a model of high design. So is the squarish, en vogue bottle of Fiji water next to it.

"Look at Ikea. Look at Target," Vlachakis says. "They've made design not just attainable but a must for everyone."

Target's tagline Design for All is something she understands well. Anyone can make a $200,000 car: unlimited resources, high-end materials. The guys at Aston Martin have it easy. The challenge is making a $20,000 car, something for the masses that does not look mass-produced. In that way, GM -- and its Detroit rivals -- don't have it so easy.

Which is why it was such a triumph when the Solstice, listed at $20,490, was the only American car named to Automobile Magazine's Most Beautiful Cars of 2006, listed alongside a $171,286 Bentley and, yes, a $162,250 Aston Martin.

Vlachakis finds ideas in the funky furniture shops and architecture in Venice Beach or in the iconoclastic detail of a well-made piece of jewelry. These days, she's especially taken by prefabricated concrete, steel and wood homes going up in trendy neighborhoods outside Venice.

To capture the masculine feel of the Sky interior, with its motorcycle-style gauges and punchy graphic interior, she drew inspiration from a chunky Tag Heuer watch.

Convincing the public on design

It is another perfect, bronze-sky sunset in Malibu, and a group of young men and women are encamped at a restaurant table, the darkening Pacific churning in the distance.

They are mostly automotive designers, Vlachakis at the center, discussing a recent trip to St. Tropez when what passes for a barroom brawl among car geeks breaks out.

"A lot of people seem to want traditional things," her friend Mike, a Malibu real estate agent, said. "I can move a Cape Cod or a traditional farmhouse in a minute, but I have a hard time selling the modern, angular stuff."

Vlachakis leans forward and cuts in: "The average buyer does not understand modern architecture," she answers. Designers, she argues, cannot always force design principles on the public. People like to be challenged, within limits. They might love the idea of the modern, angular home but end up buying the Cape Cod.

It is a lesson she's learned firsthand. Her sketch for the Solstice exterior, which Lutz rejected, was what she describes as funkier than the sketch GM went with. She still loves the Solstice (enough to own one, she notes), but it was an acknowledgement that the classic and comfortable can still trump the futuristic and funky.

There is, it turns out, a philosophical schism in GM's design house. While designers all favor pushing the consumer forward with challenging, even polarizing designs, some contend the industry hasn't gone far enough.

Sushi arrives and the table quiets. Outside, the valets run back and forth, fetching diners their Jaguars, Mercedes, BMWs and Porsches. Not a GM vehicle in the bunch. Vlachakis' back is turned from the valet. She can't see, but she doesn't have to. She already knows what she is up against.

Contact TAMARA AUDI at 313-222-6582 or audi@freepress.com.

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#3 ·
Great find and read :dthumbs:
 
#4 ·
Thanks for sharing!
 
#6 ·
Great read, and I wounder what her design of the Solstice looked like, does anyone here know or have seen it, and care to share.
 
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#12 ·
Great! Now I have someone to blame for some of the absolutely ridiculous placements!

I would not consider her a good designer. I wouldn't even consider her mediocre.

The cup holders are a joke. All I can say is she must have abnormally short forearms to put the window controls where she did. And what about the steering wheel getting in the way of the guages? Sheesh! Shall I go on? We all know the many faults of our interior.

I love my GXP. On a scale of 1 to 10, I give the exterior styling a 50!!! It's blows the top off the scale!!! :willy: It's the most beutiful car on the road!

As for the interior? Back to school for you missy! You need to learn how to design an interior.

At risk of being flamed, this looks like one of those engineering cases where a woman was probably kicked upstairs faster than she should have been. I see it all the time. We're a male dominated profession. If you're a woman and have half a brain, our world is your oyster.
 
#13 ·
A little quick to judge, aren't we?



A read of the Solstice Book will tell you that she came up with the LOOK of the interior. The details THEN had to be incorporated to some extent- and not all worked well, as we all know. She came up with a STYLE, not the engineered result. In fact, she had to position herself to be on the team after having her design selected because she wanted so much to be a part of it!

Where would we each be had Bob Lutz REJECTED out of hand the sketch that WON - just because the winning sketch did not meet the project requirement? The winner was a COUPE modified , when a convertible roadster was explicitly reqested.

I would place the blame for the lousy cup holders at the foot of the American car buyers who THINK there should be beverage holders at every opportunity! I can live without any of them. I also chose the power windows specifically because I was uncomfortable with the window crank position (relative to my leg and knee). I chose the less than perfect layout and have found after 12,000 miles that it is very seldom a concern anyway. :chill:
 
#15 ·
There was a 3-5 page article on Vicki and the Solstice in Fortune - Small Business magazine last summer. I'm trying to find the issue, but am having difficulty (I have a LOT of magazines :willy: ).

I think it was in June, July, August or September 2006 issue. Meant to mention it at the time but forgot. Sorry! :sorry: :blush:
 
#17 ·
A couple of people missed my question, I was asking about her EXTERIOR design that Bob Lutz rejected, to see if by chance it was shown somewhere in a magazine or article about her.
We know that they look at the forum, so Vicki if it is not a secret could you posted it on one of the GM sites(Thank you).
 
#18 ·
The Fortune - Small Business article had several photos and sketches, I just can't find the dang thing. :willy:
 
#25 ·
#27 ·
#28 ·
From the Success magazine article -

"Hot Car Designer Vicki Vlachakis' Cailfornia Dream - page 100"

Now...are they referring to Vicki being hot...or to the Solstice being hot?

I think both. :agree: :drool:
 
#30 ·
From the article Driven by Patrick J. Sauer (Patrick J. Sauer Online):

The Six Steps to Creating the Pontiac Solstice

01 Inspiration: The theme of the Solstice was a back-to-basics roadster, and the interior takes that approach with gauges inspired by classic motorcycles from manufacturers like Benelli and Moto Guzzi.

02 Sketches: We found out about the “sketch blitz” less than a week before they were shown to (then) GM Chairman Bob Lutz. I did four sketches before the in-house competition and my interior design won.

Image


03 Clay Models: For the Solstice, we skipped small scale and went right to the full-size clay models because of the time constraints, which meant a lot of moving big surfaces until we were satisfied with the proportion.

04 Prototypes: The Solstice was actually a metal prototype, which is a lot more complicated than a fiberglass vehicle.

05 Concept Car: We showed our Solstice concept car at the 2002 Detroit Auto Show. It’s a way to expose the public to new vehicle forms, types and technologies, and then gauge their reaction. The Solstice was a “runner,” which means that you could drive it to about 45 mph, but some of the functions did not work such as the radio and air conditioning. We built it out of metal to make it feel more like a real vehicle with stamped body panels that had realistic flanging. Flanging is when the metal is turned down in areas like the wheel arches. We got great reviews and it helped drive the commitment to building the vehicle.

06 On the Road: There is nothing more satisfying than seeing the car you’ve been working out on the highway or sitting in your garage—i know because i drive a Solstice. It’s so cool!
 
#31 ·
personally i like this pic

Image
 
#32 ·
VERY nice! :dthumbs: