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BMW laments: Hyundai Snags One of the Best

TJPark01

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Hyundai Snags One of the Best:

We recently ran a news piece that covered the breaking headline that Chris Chapman has left BMW to work for Hyundai. This news clipping is important enough to mull over for a second time.

I’ve long said that if I didn’t own a BMW, I’d own a Hyundai. Sounds crazy, doesn’t it? It would have been crazy to make such a statement 10 years ago, but in 2012 Hyundai is looking good. I should elaborate on that statement by adding that if I gave up driving a BMW and was no longer interested in performance driving, track days and drifting, I would own a Hyundai. Basically, removing performance from the performance driving equation leaves you with simple driving, and that is an area where Hyundai is awfully good at providing maximum value.

Hyundai now represents the reliable, good value option that the Japanese once represented with their late 80s, 90′s and early new-millennium offerings. Unfortunately, Toyota lost their way in a large way, not only losing their enviable reliability record (note the 14 million recalls since winter 2009) but also losing their honest design philosophy, and sporting edge of the past. To be fair, Toyota does have the FT-86 on the way – a brilliant new sports car for all that should right a few wrongs, but a single candle can’t light a factory. Honda has also lost their way, never putting a foot wrong in the area of reliability, but totally losing inspiration in design. Have you seen a recent Honda that excited you or made you want a test drive? The last car to get our juices flowing was the S2000, which has been discontinued. Honda’s Acura division also shut down production of the venerable if slightly underpowered NSX, leaving a bunch of out-dated mutts to tow the line of mediocrity. How sad.



Hyundai on the other hand has been reaching for new heights without so much as a glance down at the competition from Japan. Their market share has been growing – doubling actually – over the last few years and they now find themselves sitting at around 5% of the US market share. That might not sound like much, but given their trajectory of sales growth, Hyundai are en route to make the big players nervous.

What should make the competition even more nervous is the fact that with Hyundai’s growth, they are attracting top designers such as Chris Chapman. Chris has been in the industry for 22 years and after leaving BMW, now stands to lead Hyundai’s design center in Irvine, California to bold new heights.

Cars such as Hyundai’s new Veloster are sure to make a huge dent in the market. We’re looking forward to seeing where Chris leads the South Korean company.
 
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Don't forget that Hyundai's European design center head is Thomas Burkle, who also came from BMW.
 
Don't forget that Hyundai's European design center head is Thomas Burkle, who also came from BMW.

And Kia's Chief design officer Peter Schreyer who came from VW/Audi. Ironically the designer of the 2012 Mercedes CLS is Korean. It's like living in Bizzaro world.
 
The Veloster is fantastic. Drove one recently. A remarkably good car. Hyundai is definitely on a roll. The salesman told me that they expect a Veloster model with the turbo from the Sonata. Nice. Go Hyundai.
 
The Veloster is fantastic. Drove one recently. A remarkably good car. Hyundai is definitely on a roll. The salesman told me that they expect a Veloster model with the turbo from the Sonata. Nice. Go Hyundai.

they will definitely drop a blower in that car but it wont be the theta II 2.0T version found in the Optima or Sonata turbo. Putting 274 HP in a car that weighs 2700 pounds is like using a bazooka to kill a housefly.
 
Very interesting. I remember reading somewhere that KIA grabbed a chief designer from Audi a few years ago and he is responsible for the KIA design language. It is certain that we can expect further refinements and innovation from Hyundai's new design chief. I am looking forward to seeing where he will take the brand.
 
And Kia's Chief design officer Peter Schreyer who came from VW/Audi. Ironically the designer of the 2012 Mercedes CLS is Korean. It's like living in Bizzaro world.

Ironic indeed.

That designer, Hubert Lee designed the F800 Style concept which is to be the basis of Mercedes designs going forward.



Very interesting. I remember reading somewhere that KIA grabbed a chief designer from Audi a few years ago and he is responsible for the KIA design language. It is certain that we can expect further refinements and innovation from Hyundai's new design chief. I am looking forward to seeing where he will take the brand.

Peter Schreyer pretty much can do anything he wants at Kia.

Chapman is head of Hyundai's US design studio in Cali and like Burkle, in Germany, have to answer to Hyundai's design chief.

The turbo in the Veloster will be the 1.6T putting out around 204-208HP.

Will also go into the hot-hatch version of the Kia Rio, but not sure if we will see that here; the 1.6T may also likely go into the Elantra coupe.
 
Do we happen to know which cars he designed? Some BMWs are ugly, some are not.
 
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