Wheels (Australia)

SIMCOE’S OFFICE

Meet the current custodian of the GM Design VP’S office

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“I’M JUST THE CURRENT OCCUPIER. THE CUSTODIAN, SO IT’S ALSO MY JOB TO MAINTAIN IT. IT’S THE BEST OFFICE IN THE WORLD”

HARLEY Earl moved into his new office in GM’S vast Warren Technical Center on Friday, September 16, 1955. Almost 61 years and six vice presidents of design later, Michael Simcoe pulled up his chair behind the same huge cherry wood desk on Friday, July 1, 2016.

In true Groundhog Day style, the office remains visually identical across the six decades. Only the mostly hidden updated equipment and technology provide a clue that this is 2017 and not 1955. To this day the spacious, corner executive suite, delivering the finest view of the 287-hectare Technical Center campus, with its 20-metre high, silver hemispheri­cal domed styling auditorium and 9.3-hectare lake, remains one of the world’s great offices.

In the quality of its finish and almost overwhelmi­ng creativity of its architectu­ral excellence and fitments, this office, and the ‘hanging’ stairs and elegant corridor that take you there from the Design Staff Foyer, are a tribute to a time when General Motors was easily the world’s biggest and wealthiest company. Nobody was surprised when, in 2014, GM’S Warren Technical Center was added to the list of USA National Historic Landmark buildings that also includes the Statue of Liberty and the White House.

“I’m just the current occupier,” says Simcoe. “The custodian; so it’s also my job to maintain it.” Mike pauses, before adding, “It is the best office in the world.” No argument from me.

Simcoe’s area is one of two suites at the end of a long corridor that houses the offices of his most senior design executives, including fellow Aussie Andrew Smith, who heads up Cadillac design. The twin office to Mike’s is occupied by Mark Leavy, director of global design operations, who reports to Simcoe and manages design budgets, logistics, modelling and fabricatio­n. Everything outside the creative. To get to Simcoe you must pass through a central entry area with space for two administra­tive assistants. The two main offices are separated by a serpentine wall, rambling from the bathrooms (in the rear area) around the exquisite desk which almost encircles a seating area for meetings, and eventually rolling past a TV console to the entry. All the non-glass areas are undulating curves.

Cherrywood-finished walls are lined by individual vertical strips of ribbed aluminium; the ceiling is covered in beige fabric, cross-hatched with cherry strips. The glass coffee table can be raised electronic­ally for meetings, a desk lamp rises from its flush position at the push of a button, while low down on the side of the desk are radio, light and temperatur­e controls. In 1955 this was a technologi­cal fantasy, its beauty undiminish­ed in 2017.

Best of all is the beautiful, voluptuous and imposing desk designed specifical­ly for Harley Earl. Made of laminated cherrywood planks, it is cantilever­ed off the wall with a single chrome pedestal support at one end and within the sculptured shape are a series of drawers. According to Chuck Jordan, the fourth VP of GM design, “Mister Earl [as he was known to all who worked in design] wanted his desk and the interconne­cting furniture to simulate rounded, wooden die models.”

“Everything in here is quite deliberate” says Simcoe. “The sense to it all, the height of the furniture. You’ll notice, if you sit in a seat in front of the desk and I’m sitting in mine, you are sitting lower.”

The origins of the Tech Center can be traced back to a July 1945 speech by Alfred Sloan, chairman of the GM board, at a luncheon at New York’s Waldorf-astoria hotel. Among those present were Charles Kettering, head of research and Charles Wilson, GM president, who both understood the longterm need for a centralise­d research and developmen­t centre. With Harley Earl, they had lobbied hard since before WW2 to move out of the magnificen­t, but increasing­ly cramped, offices Albert Kahn designed for GM headquarte­rs at 3044 Grand Boulevard, close to Downtown Detroit.

GM engaged famous architects Eero Saarinen and Associates to conceive the

26-building facility. Even today it all looks amazingly modern. Engineerin­g staff began occupancy in July 1949. The last building constructe­d was for Styling with studios for each of the GM Divisions: Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick, Cadillac and GMC Truck and Coach, as well as Frigidaire and other non-automotive divisions.

Photograph­er Wielecki is enchanted by the office, its detail and especially the desk. He works steadily while Simcoe and I talk. I notice a model of the Holden Coupe 60, the proposal for the third generation Monaro.

“When the VE was done,” Simcoe explains, “there was a shopping list of all sorts of variants. Coupe 60, the VE Monaro, was to be one of them.”

Arriving in Warren around 6:15am, Simcoe estimates he spends about 20 percent of a normal 12-hour day in the office; less time than in his previous role as head of GM’S Asia-pacific design where, with Detroit operating 15 hours behind Melbourne, he was required frequently for telephone conference­s.

“I’m either in meetings here on site or at the engineerin­g centre four or five times a week and that determines how much time I spend in the studios.”

Mark Reuss, Simcoe’s boss and chief of all product developmen­t, also has an office in the design building.

“We first met in 2004, when Mark was in control of studio engineerin­g and his office was here beside mine. He moved on to other things, including Australia, so he knows me from back then. Some of the things I was chasing were things he was protecting.” What, if any changes has Simcoe dared make to Earl’s office? “None. Oh, my God. Basically you come in here with your family photograph­s, models and a comfortabl­e chair.” He grins. “It’s a Herman Miller chair, suitably tall so that I can look down on people.”

The only graphic on the walls is a painting of the 1959 Corvette Sting Ray race car, “Basically I could have any picture I wanted, that’s my preference. To me that’s the quintessen­tial Mitchell vehicle,” he says, referring to Bill Mitchell, the second GM VP of Design who held the post from 1958-1977.

“It’s an interestin­g intersecti­on between where the Italians were and where Mitchell wanted to go,” explains Simcoe. “The very simple aero forms, like Alfas, were an interestin­g mix of Europe’s aero ideals and Mitchell’s desire to create new forms.”

Simcoe took over on July 1, 2016 though he had moved to Detroit in mid-may the same year for a transition period with former boss Ed Welburn. What changes has he made as head of design?

He smiles, thinks, and comes out with, “Oh … huge and unquestion­ed.”

Then he gets serious. “Mostly the intent was to come in and not rock the boat too much. The team here are hugely competent and very creative so to come in and de-stablish the place would have affected that. What was important was to keep everyone going in the same direction and doing the programs they were already doing. We made some structural changes that I was aware needed changing and we’ll make more over time.

“In some ways I’ve been an insider [he worked in Detroit for six years in the 2000s] and have always had a network over here. I knew some of the things that people were concerned about and had an opportunit­y to change them. But not big sweeping changes. It’s my job to provide direction to a team of people who know what they are doing. I need to keep them inspired and enabled.”

What about programs that he wasn’t happy with – were there any changes there?

“I’m not going to tell you. I’ve got ego enough to come in and want to change some things. The biggest impact was stopping a program because it wasn’t doing what it needed to do, not in a design sense but other things were impacting design so we stopped and reset it.

“In the dome right now there are [he counts] about 20 full-size vehicle models. It’s a study around variants of one architectu­re.

“When Mark [Reuss] and I sat down and talked about my role and what he was expecting, it goes back to what he knows of me. I’m relatively pragmatic and I like design to be total design. Designers are not stylists; they are designers and they are holistic in their impact on a vehicle. If we can’t influence the design architectu­re of the vehicle, the quality of the vehicle and

“I’M RELATIVELY PRAGMATIC AND I LIKE DESIGN TO BE TOTAL DESIGN. DESIGNERS ARE NOT STYLISTS; THEY ARE DESIGNERS AND THEY ARE HOLISTIC IN THEIR IMPACT ON A VEHICLE”

the function of the vehicle, then we are not doing our job.

“There were lots of stories early on about me being an engineer in a designer’s clothing. That’s all rubbish. I’m a designer, but I know how to argue with an engineer. As a designer I enjoy the mechanism of things, I enjoy the structure. Without understand­ing that you don’t understand proportion and therefore you can’t design.” Are there designers who don’t understand proportion­s? “Over the years there have been people who have been stylists in the truest sense. It hasn’t held them back because they are usually supported by competent people. Nobody who fails lasts very long. There are stylists and there are designers. You need a good mix of both in a team.

“You get old and wily and you know the right people to have around you to get the job done. It’s impossible to be as creative and filled with energy as a young designer, but clearly they need your help to get their vision on the table. And they react to your brief, which is a bigger vision. It works best if you keep your ego in check and support rather than overpower. You end up getting the accolades anyway.” Where does Simcoe see design heading in the future? “Design is at a nexus. You hear all the talk about autonomous and electrifie­d vehicles, while legislatio­n is getting more serious. There is this notion that designers are going to lose their role because autonomous cars are going to take over. That is a nonsense. The reality is designers create experience, create emotion, customers will always want that. We are a long way from a world where there won’t be choice.

“Even if you believe – and I don’t – that the experience is going to become ubiquitous, you still need emotion to sell it. Designers are getting more engaged in the experience and not just the styling of the interior. They are creating the experience. They are now dealing in an environmen­t where driving or not driving is a choice, so the experience becomes even more important. The designer discipline now is becoming far more layered. The requiremen­ts on designers are greater than they have ever been and the opportunit­ies for designers will grow as well. More of our creative designers are coming from the gaming industry and are people who [previously] created video and digital online content.” Does he see a convergenc­e between sedans and SUVS? “That would be giving away secrets. No matter what happens, whether the market moves towards more and more SUVS, we are going to need to become more differenti­ated. Customers are conscious of style and the need to feel different.” Does that account for so many of today’s ugly SUVS? “You have to applaud them for trying to be different. What was very odd and very awkward is being worked through more interpreta­tions and becoming more realistic. It is hard to criticise people for being brave or different. At the same time you have to have a level of judgement that is better than some of the things on the market.”

Among GM’S rivals, who does Simcoe believe is achieving the best aesthetic result?

He doesn’t hesitate: “Mazda is doing a good job in terms of design, branding and its portfolio of products.” I ask about GM’S coming new design studios. “The nice thing about the new building [which opens in 2020 to double the studio size] is its location behind the dome. It is in a style that honours and respects the cadence of this building, without trying to ape it.” Wielecki is finished. It’s time to go. “The interestin­g thing about this office is that it is always different,” says Simcoe. “The light is different, the soft shapes, it lights up differentl­y every day and has different light signatures within the room itself. I open the curtains and it feels like the bridge of an aircraft carrier. It’s a very commanding position. I think that was intentiona­l.

“This is a very nice place to be.”

“THE INTERESTIN­G THING ABOUT THIS OFFICE IS THAT IT IS ALWAYS DIFFERENT. THIS IS A VERY NICE PLACE TO BE”

 ??  ?? FAR LEFT: LAID BACK VISITORS’ CHAIRS ARE DELIBERATE­LY CHOSEN TO GIVE SIMCOE A SLIGHT HEIGHT ADVANTAGE FROM HIS HERMAN MILLER PEW, JUST IN CASE ANYONE FORGETS WHO’S THE BOSS
FAR LEFT: LAID BACK VISITORS’ CHAIRS ARE DELIBERATE­LY CHOSEN TO GIVE SIMCOE A SLIGHT HEIGHT ADVANTAGE FROM HIS HERMAN MILLER PEW, JUST IN CASE ANYONE FORGETS WHO’S THE BOSS
 ??  ?? ABOVE: RETRO CONTROLS FOR THE RADIO, LIGHTS AND AIRCONDITI­ONING COME BACK INTO FASHION EVERY COUPLE OF DECADES. IN BETWEEN, THEY’RE AMONG THE ONLY FEATURES THAT DATE THE VP’S OFFICE
ABOVE: RETRO CONTROLS FOR THE RADIO, LIGHTS AND AIRCONDITI­ONING COME BACK INTO FASHION EVERY COUPLE OF DECADES. IN BETWEEN, THEY’RE AMONG THE ONLY FEATURES THAT DATE THE VP’S OFFICE
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 ??  ?? BELOW: FAMILY PHOTOS AND A COUPLE OF TROPHIES ARE IT FOR PERSONAL TOUCHES. THIS IS A ZERO-CLUTTER SPACE
BELOW: FAMILY PHOTOS AND A COUPLE OF TROPHIES ARE IT FOR PERSONAL TOUCHES. THIS IS A ZERO-CLUTTER SPACE
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