Assembly magazine
Home
Online
Industry Headlines
AssemblyBlog
ASSEMBLYtv
Buyers Guide
Showrooms
Product Review
How To Guides
Webinar
Ask ASSEMBLY
Calendar of Events
eNewsletter
Current Issue
Cover Story
Features
Departments
Digital Edition
Resources
Podcasts
Archives
Job Search
White Papers
Industry Links
Contract Assembly Services
Website Review
E-Cards
Market Research
List Rental
Classified Ads
ASSEMBLY Info
Advertise
Subscribe
About Assembly
Staff Directory
Editorial Calendar
Reprints
Search in: EditorialProductsCompanies
The Inside Story: Numerous Sources Inspire Interior Designers

February 19, 2007

ARTICLE TOOLS
EmailEmailPrintPrintReprintsReprintsshareShare



Automotive design engineers look to many sources of inspiration when creating interiors. Years before a new model reaches the market, designers must select fabrics and materials for the interior trim. They have to know which colors and patterns are going to be popular with customers 5 to 10 years in the future.

“Our ideas give an identity to the car and its atmosphere,” says Oona Scheepers, head of colors and interiors at Audi AG (Ingolstadt, Germany), which many obervers consider to be the benchmark. “We have to consider the longevity of our products.

“It’s not like with fashion, where you buy yourself a new blouse, dress or jacket, and then hang them up at the back of the wardrobe after a year because they’re no longer fashionable,” adds Scheepers. “A car is too expensive and too durable for that. Not everything that happens to be in fashion at the moment can be transferred to the car.”

Scheepers and her colleagues evaluate social trends, visit furniture and textile fairs, and study the fashion, design and advertising industries. In addition, they are influenced by nature, art and architecture. More and more interior designers are taking design cues today from consumer electronic products, such as cell phones, computers, iPods, MP3 players and wristwatches.

Interior designers must choose between a large amount of natural and synthetic meterials, ranging from metallic surfaces to wood inlays and leather to plastic. The challenge is to find a solution that’s aesthetically pleasing and cost-effective.

“We have to take in everything that is happening around us like a sponge,” says Scheepers. “We think four to six years ahead. It is important not to chase after existing trends, but to set your own.”



Did you enjoy this article? Click here to subscribe to the magazine.

Most Emailed Articles

  1. Webcast to Discuss How to Prevent Failure of Plastic Parts
  2. Putting Cars on a Diet
  3. Pulse Tools Get Smart
  4. Reptiles Delay Construction of Assembly Plant
  5. Design Lean Cells for Flexibility
  6. It's All About the Battery
  7. GM Centennial: Trendsetting Plants
  8. Plastics Assembly: Design for X
  9. GM Centennial: Worldwide Growth Is Driven by China
  10. It's All About the Battery

Top Searches

  1. Lean Workstation
  2. leak testing
  3. torque
  4. lean
  5. wave solder
  6. Plants
  7. model t
  8. fuel cell
  9. robots
  10. ritter

Most Popular Articles

  1. Mind the Gap 2/20/08
  2. Leading Lean: Build on Your Success 12/17/07
  3. Assembly in Action: Supplier Key to Machine Builderís Success 5/25/07
  4. Ball Grid Array Soldering 1/25/08
  5. Putting the Squeeze on Rivets 12/17/07
  6. Nanotechnology Transforms Lithium-ion Batteries 2/4/08
  7. Successful Design For Assembly 2/26/07
  8. Leading Lean: Make Everything Visual 6/25/07
  9. Leading Lean: Your Lean Library 11/27/07
  10. Select a Workstation for Lean Manufacturing 7/16/07
© 2008 BNP Media. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy