Chief Audi Designer Talks About Inspiration And The Audi Design Language

Chief Audi Designer Talks About Inspiration And The Audi Design Language
Audi vehicle interiors are widely considered to be among the best, if not the best, but chief Audi designer Stefan Sielaff isn't entirely satisfied. Tapping his fingernails hard on a curved strip on the dashboard of an R8 coupe, he says, "This I don't like. It's too plasticky. We'll change this and cover it with leather material."

He lays his hand on the car's textured aluminum transmission shifter knob. "This detail," he says, "I really love."

Sielaff, 47, has spent most of his career at Audi, one of the premium brands of Volkswagen AG, Germany's biggest automaker.

During a visit to Detroit to address the Ward's Auto Interiors Conference, Sielaff spoke with The Detroit News about his work and which rivals he watches.

Q . Where do you look for ideas and inspiration?

A . I believe designers should go out of the studio, travel, go to other countries.

There are traditional hot spots like Italy. We always visit the Milan furniture shows.

We even go to Singapore for the fashion shows. When we look at the art markets, the Chinese and Indians are making strong statements now.

For clear and clean product design, Scandinavia is still a place to go, where we draw a lot of inspiration. From an architectural point of view, we look to the U.S., at architects like Frank Lloyd Wright. I'm a big fan of Frank Gehry.

Q . Most car designers benchmark Audi. Whom do you benchmark?

A . We look at what the other high-end manufacturers are doing: Aston Martin, Bentley. Within the VW group, I love Bentley and Lamborghini.

Outside the VW group, I have to say Aston Martin. They are doing very emotional products, with good design quality.

Land Rover is also a brand I like. I like the authenticity and clean design language.

If you look at BMW and Mercedes, they're doing baroque cars and baroque interiors, very heavy and overdecorated. I don't want a heavy or bulky interior.

Q . What do you think of Asia's aspiring premium carmakers? Hyundai, for instance?

A . To ignore these companies would be a mistake. We shouldn't be arrogant. But if they want to do a premium brand, it'll take them a few years, if not a few decades. We will see.

Q . When you design a car, how much emphasis do you put on comfort?

A . When you have a sporty brand like Audi, you cannot do everything. We focus on sportiness, so our suspensions are a bit harder than they might be in cars that focus more on comfort. We definitely will not do couch-potato soft cars. That's for sure.

Comfort is also good ergonomics, and ergonomics is something we do very well. It's also having good screens and displays.

Q . If Porsche and Volkswagen get together, how will that affect the positioning of the Audi brand within the group?

A . If Porsche is integrated into the Volkswagen group, it will not affect our work at Audi. Today Volkswagen has strictly separated brands. Porsche will have a very clear profile, and Audi, too.

Porsche is even more of a sports car manufacturer than Audi. Audi is also sporty but it's more understated, more elegant.

Porsches are beautiful cars, fantastic cars, but they're not elegant. They're a bit rough.

I don't think there will be a problem of the brands coming too close together or overlapping.

Q . How hard is it these days to get the money you need to design good interiors with good materials?

A . I fight a lot to get what we want and what my team needs. I understand the management side. We have to earn money with our product. On the other hand, I want a nice product.

The customer is very intelligent and able to see if the company or the brand has spent a certain amount of money on the product or if it is just playing a game with the customer. Our president, (Rupert) Stadler, has a finance background but understands that if we save money on design, it hurts the company.
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cocococococo - 5/27/2009 3:37:09 AM
+1 Boost
"We take inspiration from outside the studio. For example, we took a chain-link fence and turned it into a grille."


DoctorCDoctorC - 5/27/2009 7:04:03 AM
-2 Boost
"We always visit the Milan furniture shows.
We even go to Singapore for the fashion shows"

They work so hard there... No wonder the price of the car is so high. Instead of investing money in R&D, they spent it on leisure.

The only Audi thing that i will buy is a rocking horse (Milano style)



inspirion7inspirion7 - 5/27/2009 11:11:41 AM
+2 Boost
Obviously you have never worked designing anything.


SHOWTIMESHOWTIME - 5/27/2009 9:02:11 AM
+4 Boost
how about designing the interior differently for each model? actually, even the exterior!! A4, A5, A6 all look identical inside and out


inspirion7inspirion7 - 5/27/2009 11:23:55 AM
+1 Boost
Audi's Inspiration for the last three decades seems to be a used bar of soap. — Invisible

"There can be sign on intelligence here if we looked hard enough, I'm sure we will find it"




Joe_LimonJoe_Limon - 5/27/2009 9:46:01 AM
+1 Boost
It all makes sense now... the bumper cart steering wheel, the blinged out keg shaped shifter knob, the cheap plastic littered throughout...
http://www.macarbon.com/components/com_virtuemart/shop_image/product/0dd142cfb39427409afbfcf263c4b107.jpg

Audi's Design influences are clearly influenced by the Chinese!


_43LE_43LE - 5/27/2009 9:55:03 AM
+2 Boost
I'm not fond of Audi interior design, but the quality is certainly there.


222max222max - 5/27/2009 11:00:19 AM
+5 Boost
WHAT????!^^^^


inspirion7inspirion7 - 5/27/2009 11:20:31 AM
+3 Boost
LexusNews you are right to up to the point of quality. The first two generations of Lexus had horrible leather that just gave out. Germans have always had better hides and to this day that stands. Lexus did better, (check out the first hook up with Coach) as time has progressed. The statement about Audi interiors just didn't come out of thin air. There is no question, Audi makes some of the best interiors, and if you were to do search over industry designers you would find this to be true. Question if you will about the designs over all, Audi sales obviously proves it. You can't price vehicles like Audi and sell them around the world and be more profitable than most in this economic climate, if every one though you made so-so designs.


WillisWillis - 5/27/2009 11:21:26 AM
+3 Boost
Lexus interiors are some of the most overrated in the business. I recently sat in the new RX and the HS250h and I wasn't impressed at all. Even the LS fails to impress when you compare it to the A8, S and new 7er interiors.

My opinion, of course.


Agent00RAgent00R - 5/27/2009 12:57:34 PM
+5 Boost
A nice insight into Audi's design.

Best line:

"If you look at BMW and Mercedes, they're doing baroque cars and baroque interiors, very heavy and overdecorated. I don't want a heavy or bulky interior."



sectorsector - 5/27/2009 1:10:31 PM
+2 Boost
Audi needs to steer away from that BBQ trapezoid grill though...


inspirion7inspirion7 - 5/27/2009 3:58:08 PM
+1 Boost
sector,the grill says" this is Audi" and along with the LED light signature, Audi has one of the most unique fascia on the market.


cocococococo - 5/27/2009 6:01:35 PM
+1 Boost
'Unique' is not the same as 'high-quality.'


Joe_LimonJoe_Limon - 5/27/2009 10:12:44 PM
+2 Boost
Is it just me, or are the LED's starting to look dated. Whenever I see them on the road I am always reminded of Christmas lights.


Joe_LimonJoe_Limon - 5/28/2009 9:55:12 AM
-1 Boost
What? That doesn't make sense, putting all those excess watts of excess power into the injectors will not give you better fuel economy... and as it is, switching to LED's will only lower your entire alternator draw about 1% (the smallest unmeasurable fraction of wheel power/economy) very negligible for having to put up with gawdy christmas lights.


Johnny_BootsJohnny_Boots - 5/28/2009 12:02:34 PM
+2 Boost
The value of LEDs in car design is invaluable. Power savings, smaller package allowing more passenger/compartment space, they last the lifetime of the car, their faster response time alerts drivers behind them to stop quicker so their safer, not to mention extremely efficient. Incandescent lamps are extremely wasteful, most of their energy is converted into heat rather than light. It also allows designers to be more creative as the limitations of materials are different.

And quality? what the hell is quality anyway. how do you define it?


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