The Giorgetto
Giugiaro created Fiat Croma 8ttoV has made a low-key
appearance at the Frankfurt Motor Show, presented on the
stand of Italian alloy road wheel manufacturer, Tecnoforming.
Brescia-based Tecnoforming Spa made the large, chunky alloy
wheels that the Ferrari V8-powered Croma 8ttoV sits astride,
and to signify this fact the show car has appeared at the
prestigious German Motor Show, which closes its doors to the
public for the last time this evening.
To mark the
public debut of the Fiat Croma at the Geneva Motor
Show back in March, Giorgetto Giugiaro wanted to recall Gianni Agnelli,
the uncrowned monarch of the Italian motor industry – an
enthusiast of his “Croma Special” - bringing to light a more
generous model this time round in terms of performance and
appearance, encapsulating the essence of a high-performance
car, just like the car that would have appealed – as so we
believe – to the “Avvocato”, the Croma 8V prototype. “I have great
empathy with the Croma. I remember the first model: its
breakthrough architecture and comfort carried it forward to
being the flagship medium-large saloon on sale between 1985
and 1994, with over 450,000 vehicles sold during that
period," said Giugiaro. "For the new
Croma range, I sought to make the Croma 8V what it should
be: extraordinarily spacious, innovative and stunning in
quality. As a mere starting point, I looked to the space
assignable to passengers and reminisced on the experience
gained from the styling and design challenge emerging from
the Maserati Buran prototype, which I designed in 2000 as a
compact, luxury saloon car. My thoughts weaved back yet
again to the privilege of motion and easy access, spacious,
multi-purpose interior.
"I remember
presenting the Buran to Gianni Agnelli on the track and how he so
appreciated that train of thought focused around offering
unashamedly and unapologetically spacious legroom and
passenger comfort. Having assessed
the interior space available in this car range, unique in
its size class, I knew in myself that the interior space
available in the Croma 8V was crying out to be exalted”,
confirms Giorgetto Giugiaro.
Compared with
the series-production Fiat Croma, the exterior introduces
unique design features that herald the elegancy of this
luxury, high-performance car. The all-new radiator grill
mounts a slanting ribbed grid, set just below the chrome
beltline allied to the bodywork, while the lower air-intake
continues to thread through the upside-down trapezoidal
motif embodied within the radiator grille.
Enriching the
rear light units is led technology.
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Chrome inlays on the front and rear bumpers confer elegance,
whilst their heightened chiselled angles also work towards protecting the bodyshell. In response to
the challenges posed by the new and more powerful
eight-cylinder engine, the car features two exhaust
silencers at the tail-end; the exhausts intermesh into a
spoiler motif, while the louvers take a bolder stance.
Offering greater
privacy, the car comes with dark tinted windows.
An “executive”
interior cradled in ultimate refinement
Classified
within the high-range segment, the Fiat Croma Special offers
seating for four, all of which cradled in an atmosphere of
stunning elegance: the leather-wrapped and trimmed seating
surfaces were created in collaboration with Poltrona Frau
with whom Giorgetto Giugiaro styled a pastel harmony, mated
to inlays surrounded in briarwood trim.
The low–slung
second row seating at the rear makes access easier for
passengers: given the low-slung design around the structure
shapes, which, at that point, verge downwards and generously
carve out more legroom between the seating and the door
post. Second-row
passenger amenities include a multi-use storage compartment
located in the center aisle that folds forward into the
tunnel. There is an upright fridge-bar fitted between the
rear seats. Beneath the
center armrest is a fold-down work table and an extra
storage holder has been added where cups, glasses or other
can be kept, whilst, at the touch of a button,
aeronautic-type swivel monitors emerge.As the rear
seats are not tilt-adjustable, some 50 mm. of extra space
has been carved out and added to the backrest’s depth,
thereby ensuring more comfortable seating.
Affording
protection to the car’s occupants from noise or draughts on
opening the luggage trunk is the fixed glass pane introduced
by Giorgetto Giugiaro behind the hat rack thereby setting
apart the passenger environment from the luggage trunk, also
tailored in fine detail with fine leather trims. To the side of
the trunk’s interior, next to the wheel arches, there are
handy flap-holders, with book-retaining straps, complete
with portable bags. Additionally, fixed to the rim of the
hatch-back door is a panel enabling luggage to be laid flat,
along with an underlying float chamber.
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