EV Concepts: Back to the Future?
Concept cars, also called prototypes, are showcased at auto shows to test media and public interest. The idea began in 1938 with the Buick Y-Job, a specialty vehicle presented as a vision of how future cars might look in 20 years.
The idea of forecasting the automotive future stuck.
Nearly 85 years later the practice remains, including during the LA Auto Show. Its 10-day run, the show’s first edition since 2019 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, ends today at the Los Angeles Convention Center.
Themes presented in concepts change. Sometimes a one-off creation is so bizarre its only job is to attract attention. Sometimes, concepts are nearly identical to the production vehicle about to debut.
Overridingly, concepts at this year’s event were electric vehicles or EVs. It was the dominant thread of the first major international auto show in two years. Among the speculative offerings, none are predicted to be publicly available until at least next fall and as far off as 2025.
Like the much-touted Byton, a concept that debuted with Rivian in 2018, some of the concepts will never be made. The high-performance sedan, promoted as a competitor of Tesla, filed for bankruptcy earlier this year.
VinFast, the first “mainstream” manufacturer from Vietnam with plans to distribute two sport utility vehicles in the United States, had the largest presence of the pending EVs this year.
From its unveiling on the opening day of the auto show to a lavish evening reception and extended show presence, VinFast made a committed effort.
According to its marketing, VinFast in Vietnamese stands for “Style, Safety, Creativity, Pioneer.” It touts its vehicles as “the product of our inspiration to launch a distinctive, world-class automotive brand with Vietnam and demonstrates the ability of the Vietnamese people to skillfully implement cutting-edge technology.”
Like other pending vehicles, VinFast has no definitive production plans or pricing for its SUV crossovers, the e35 and e36. Both are designed by Italy’s famed Pininfarina.
Two other new names to the EV marketplace are Canoo and Mullen. The former was promoted as an autonomous “Lifestyle Vehicle.” Its marketing material reads in part: