Capri revival hopes still alive
Ford design boss says he’d ‘love’ to resuscitate the model for today. By Mark Tisshaw
The dream of reviving the Ford Capri lives on within the company’s European design studio, according to the man who leads it, Amko Leenarts. Ford recently brought back the Puma as an SUV, will soon revive the Bronco and is using the Mustang as inspiration for its first electric car, leaving others to speculate about what else from the firm’s rich back catalogue it could create a modern-day version of.
“Who would not want to bring back the Capri as a design?” said Mr Leenarts, when asked about badging and which models from the past could be used to inspire his design team. “We’d love it. But it’s got to be in the zeitgeist and has to fit, and work as a plural, not just exist as something for a designer to bring back an old car.”
He added: “I’m amazed by the amount of names we own that spur emotions, positive and negative.”
On that latter point, Mr Leenarts pointed to the example of the Probe, which had once been seen as a progressive, futuristic study of aerodynamics, yet instead is remembered as a model that flopped in the late 1990s.
Mr Leenarts took over as Ford of Europe’s design boss two years ago; but, unlike in the past when Ford gave names to the design language it pursues, he prefers a more open brief.
“Kinetic design was the right move at the right time,” he said. “But it’s now pretty old-fashioned to have a name. It’s just to tick a box, rather than design around.
“We have many different vehicles in the portfolio that no single design language or philosophy could cover. It can be good to have [a design language name], but you can end up with as many failures as successes.
“We’re a global company with different roots and territories. There are different ways to cut design philosophies. Cutting it to one is not fair or honest to make a range of products.”
It has now been eight years since Ford last launched a pure concept car with the 2011 Evos, and Mr Leenarts said there are no imminent plans to return to making them.
“We’ve moved towards live internal demonstrations,” he said. “We rally round as a team, not just a car to put away on a show stand. I’m not pushing that idea [of making a concept] too much.”