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The Great Chris Bangle

Aug09
2011
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From letf to right: Jagpreet Singh, Chris Bangle, Abhishek Singh & Chandra Prasad
From letf to right: Jagpreet Singh, Chris Bangle, Abhishek Singh & Chandra Prasad


“Bangle is arguably the most influential auto designer of his generation.” – Phil Patton, New York Times, February 20, 2006.

And one look at Bangle’s work is enough to conclude that Patton isn’t exaggerating. Bangle is and will continue to be one of the icons in the automotive industry, for no one else has had the kind of impact he has had in the field of automobile design. Bangle started his career at Opel after graduating from Art Center College of Design, Pasadena. His next stop was Fiat, where he designed the Coupe Fiat. In 1992, BMW named him Chief of Design. He was the first American to be offered this position. It is his excellent, fearless work with BMW is what he is known for the most.

Some of the faculty members of DYPDC Center for Automotive Research and Studies caught up with Chris Bangle when he was in India recently, and had the great fortune of indulging in chit-chat about design and his philosophy, amongst other things.

Mentioned below is the transcribed version of their interaction.

According to Chris there are quite a few elements that make a design stand apart, that make it distinct, unique in comparison to others. It has to have an element of brilliance. Jaws should drop. It should be the first one to solve an existing problem. So in that sense, it has to be futuristic. The design should be timeless and distinct. It should be so awe-inspiring that it shifts paradigms, in the bargain, inspiring others. It should have this quality that makes others want to be “it”.

Chris said to be a successful designer one needs to learn to challenge everyday doing; to respect convention but not be bound by it. He said culture does play an extremely important part in shaping a person. It plays a crucial role in design as well, he said. He advised designers to be aware of it; to be courageous most of all and not be afraid to do what you really want to do.

He also spoke about the things a designer should keep in mind while designing a car. He said he would like to discourage in designers the thought that there’s something called a “women’s” car, and that if you make one, no one will buy it. He advised designers to never fall in this mindset or be racist against small cars. Also designers should always follow proportions surface detail while designing, he added.

When it came to his design strategy, he said he followed 10 steps, which are as follows:

Step 1: Understanding the dogmas: i.e. what I am, what I am not

Step 2: Finding the metaphor

Step 3: Re-thinking the metaphor

Step 4:

(a): Just thinking…a lot

(b): Thinking what culture can do

(c): USP

Step 5: Making a bold Conclusion (here he talked about 7 series, Bangle Butt)

Step 6: Evolving Metaphor

Step 7: Defining in action

Step 8: Preparing to take heat (talked about the job of a design head)

Step 9: Leveraging my resources

Step 10: Empowering my team

The faculty of DYPDC Center for Automotive Research and Studies are absolutely thrilled that they got to spend time with one of the greats of automobile design and are already looking forward to meeting Bangle the next time he’s in town.

Posted in DYPDC - 2011 - Tagged automobile research, chris bangle, DC design school, design school, design workshop, dilip chhabria, DYPDC Center for automotive research and studies, dypdc faculty

Design is the practice that allows dreams to come through.

Aug09
2011
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Nicole Crea is a design manager and consultant for product development. He has worked as a car designer at Pininfarina Concept Institute, Fiat, Mercedes-Benz cars and Giannini. In 1992, he ventured into designing of boats and motorcycles. He started his consultancy, “Victory design”, an engineering studio devoted to yacht design based in Naples. Upon moving to Germany, he worked for “Daimler-Chrysler” at the Mercedes-Benz Advanced Design studio in Sindelfingen (Stuttgart), from 1996 to 1998. From 2006 to 2008 he headed CISME (Centro Interdipartimentale di Studi sulla Mobilità Ecosostenibile), research center of studies on sustainable mobility. He is also the member of scientific committee as well as coordinator of all design activities for Tulton, a company that specializes in development of new products. He is a professor at the University of Chieti, and regularly collaborates with the Politecnico di Milano and University of Genoa.

He was gracious enough to answer some of our questions when he was at our campus.

Tell us a bit about your background. What you’ve been doing? What you intend to do in the future?

I was born in 1957, I am a car design manager, expert in industrial product development. I am also a university design teacher.

In 1982 I graduated from Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California (U.S.A.), in transportation design. The same year I moved to Turin, in Italy, where I started working as a designer for “Pininfarina Studi & Ricerche”.

From 1983 to 1986 I worked as a senior designer at “I.DE.A. Institute”.

In 1986 I was hired by Fiat Auto as design manager and studio chief in charge of exterior design of Fiat cars. Later and until 1992, I worked as manager of exterior design of Lancia cars at Centro Stile Lancia in Orbassano. One remarkable result of this engagement was the development of the Lancia Delta Integrale.

In 1992 I started my collaboration with “Giannini Automobili”. I was engaged as director of design and in charge of the development of new products. In only four years, I achieved the task to qualify Giannini as “carrozzeria” in ANFIA, Italian national association of coachbuilders.

In 1996, at the Turin International Auto Show, Giannini, in parallel with all the major Italian coachbuilders, has been invited by Fiat Auto to develop a show car based on the new Brava. Giannini presents Windsurf, a coupé with very advanced aerodynamic concept, which I entirely conceived and developed.

Meantime, since 1992, I widened my professional interest to the design of boats and motorcycles. I started consultancies with “Victory design”, engineering studio devoted to yacht design based in Naples, and “Majestic Auto”, Indian industry producer of motorcycle and mopeds. In both cases I had the opportunity to transfer my specific knowledge and the development technologies in use in the automotive field to these other product sectors.

From 1996 to 1998, I moved to Germany to work for “Daimler-Chrysler” at the Mercedes-Benz Advanced Design studio in Sindelfingen (Stuttgart).

From 1999 on, my engagements are shared between consultancies and teaching. In fact in the following years I’ve been involved with the Universities of Pescara, Genoa and the Polytechnic of Milan as a teacher in their courses of studies.

During this period of time I developed projects with several companies such as Tecnema, Picchio, Bizzarrini and Tasso (now Italcar) in many cases creating a synergy between industry and the academic world. I organized my research activity by creating, with prof. Michele Platania, CISME (Centro Interdipartimentale di Studi sulla Mobilità Ecosostenibile), a center of studies on sustainable mobility. In 2006, I became director of the research center. Meanwhile, I became member of the scientific committee as well as coordinator of all design activities of Tulton, company specialized in new products development.

Since 2007, I’ve been with the Politecnico di Milano, where I teach and perform my research activity and tutorship of the master on Automobile Design organized with Alfa Romeo. I am now member of the research unit of Advanced design (UDR ADD). I am also member of the commission for evaluation of new patents of the Facoltà del Design of the Politecnico di Milano. I am also project leader of interdisciplinary projects for the Alta Scuola Politecnica (Politecnico di Milano and Politecnico di Torino).

I am in charge of Strategic Design course at the Faculty of Architecture of the University of Genova.

Since 2009, I’ve been with the Scientific Committee of Milano car design, in the capacity of President. It’s a company devoted to research, design and production of prototypes and special vehicles and in charge of design development and consultant for D.EA. srl (Design and Architecture).

The ambition for the future is to do always better in my work and try to achieve something remarkable in terms of new products, as well as in my academic activity.

What does design mean to you?

Design is one of the most complex human activities. It is a mix of technology, art and social science. The core is innovation. Innovation has the peculiarity of being interdisciplinary. This requires the contribution of other competences. With the wide range of knowledge involved, coordination and organization of projects plays a fundamental role. Moreover, any project must be the development of a new idea, it cannot be the execution of some acquired know-how, as in case of some other disciplines. Design, also, is a way of expression, a communication mean. Design is the practice that allows dreams to come through. Man will always desire. This is why design practice will never stop.

How did you get interested in Automobile Design?

I started to read numbers on car plates, I recognized cars by looking at their wheels, I started to recognize sound hearing the noise of different cars, at school all my notebooks were full of car sketches. I started to play with cars, use them, take them apart, paint them, modify them. I could recognize cars anywhere. I could tell the date of first registration of a car by reading the number on the license plate. At 18 years old, I started to race cars and I had parts all over in my bedroom. I started buying, selling, exchanging and collecting cars. In my life I’ve owned about 90 cars, with a maximum of 15 at the same time. I used to believe that each one of them had a different spirit.

What’s the scope of automobile design in India?

Mobility allows a better life quality. Mostly saves you time, so you can have a more intense life. In developed countries people spends a lot of time inside their automobiles, which has become a sort of prosthesis of our ego. For this reason cars have a representative function which has to be coherent with the culture of the owner. The scope of automobile design is to conceive complex products to supply population with tools and services that people expects. The most interesting challenge it would be to understand exactly what an automobile means to Indian population and its culture and to do our best to design it.

Tell us a bit about your role as visiting faculty at DYPDC

I am offering my experience as a teacher and car designer to the development of DYPDC

What are your thoughts about DYPDC? About what it is trying to achieve?

I believe that DYPDC has set very ambitious goals for its institution. We are talking of the vision of a school that becomes a reference in car design in India and, why not, that spreads its reputation all over the world. This is a fascinating dream and I would be pleased to be part of it. I am putting my competence, my knowledge and my enthusiasm as contribution to this program.

What advice would you give to upcoming designers?

To be a designer is a very special job. It needs a lot of knowledge and a lot of competences. To become a designer takes time and patience, but when you got there, in my opinion, it is one of the most rewarding professions (not necessarily from an economical point of view). So, if you have that special spark inside, it’s worth working hard for it.

Posted in DYPDC - 2011 - Tagged Alta Scuola Politecnica, Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, Bizzarrini and Tasso, California, Centro Stile Lancia, CISME (Centro Interdipartimentale di Studi sulla Mobilità Ecosostenibile), Daimler-Chrysler, DC, dilip chhabria, DYPDC Center for automotive research and studies, DYPDC College, Fiat Auto, Giannini Automobili, I.DE.A. Institute, industrial product development, Lancia Delta Integrale, Majestic Auto, Milano car design, Nicola Crea, Picchio, Pininfarina Studi & Ricerche, Politecnico di Milano, Pune, Tecnema, transportation design, Victory design

Luminaries at DYPDC

Aug08
2011
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Mahendra Patel


These are good times at DYPDC Center for Automotive Research and Studies. A lot is happening and it is happening quickly. It’s only been a fortnight since the undergraduate and postgraduate program in automobile design began and we’ve already had some of the best in the field of design interacting with our students.

First up was Prof. Mahendra Patel, who spent two days with our students teaching Visual Order. He covered topics like Harmony, Rhythm, Balance and Contrast. The time he spent with the students helped them immensely in understanding visual order and its extremely important role in design. A little about him : Prof. Patel is one of the finest teachers of Design today. He has been a faculty with National institute of Design, Ahmedabad for the past 39 years. He also conducts workshops and training programs at Faculty of Fine Arts, Baroda; Srishti College of Arts and Design, Bangalore, Mudra Institute of Communications, Ahmedabad, Industrial Design Center, IIT Mumbai, and Indian Institute of Crafts, Jaipur. He has also taught at Rhode Island School of Design, USA, Nova Scotia College of Arts, Canada, Christchurch College of Arts, New Zealand and Indus Valley School of Arts and Architecture, Pakistan. Presently, he is serving as adjunct faculty member at the Symbiosis Institute of Design (SID) and MIT Institute of Design, both of which are in Pune. He recently won the Gutenberg International Award for his contribution in font designing for Indian scripts, and map design and signage design for Indian cities.

We also have on our campus Mr. Patrick Roupin and Mr. Nicola Crea.

Mr. Patrick Roupin is an award winning Belgium designer. He holds a Masters degree in product engineering design from the ISD – Supinfocom Group, Valenciennes / Pune. He won the Designer for Real World – Victor PAPANECK Prize in 2004. Patrick formerly worked as a usability specialist for one of the world’s leading usability companies in India. He has also worked as a product designer with companies such as Decathlon and Faurecia in France. He’s doing some very interesting workshops with our students, which are mainly focused on social experiments.

Mr. Nicola Crea is a design manager and consultant for product development, who has worked with great automobile companies like Pininfarina Concept Institute, Fiat, Mercedes-Benz cars and Giannini. In 1992, he ventured into designing of boats and motorcycles and started his own consultancy, “Victory design”, which is an engineering studio devoted to yacht design. From 2006 to 2008, he headed CISME (Centro Interdipartimentale di Studi sulla Mobilità Ecosostenibile), research center of studies on sustainable mobility. He is also the coordinator for all design activities for Tulton, a company that specializes in development of new products. He is a professor at the University of Chieti, and regularly collaborates with the Politecnico di Milano and University of Genoa.

To be among such luminaries has truly been exhilarating for our students, who have eagerly absorbed all that these greats had to offer. Rest assured, it is only going to get bigger, better, and brighter from this point on.

Posted in DYPDC - 2011 - Tagged automobile designers, automobiles, Automotove Design School, Design, DYPDC, DYPDC Center for automotive research and studies, DYPDC College, faculties, faculty, guest faculty, Nicola Crea, Patrick Roupin, Prof. Mahendra Patel, Pune, visiting faculty

I believe in functional design – Prof Mahendra Patel

Aug08
2011
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Mahendra Patel
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World renowned Professor Mahendra Patel graced the DYPDC campus and took a session on Visual Order. Prof. Patel is one of the finest teachers of Design today. He has been a faculty with National institute of Design, Ahmedabad for the past 39 years. He also conducts workshops and training programs at Faculty of Fine Arts, Baroda; Srishti College of Arts and Design, Bangalore, Mudra Institute of Communications, Ahmedabad, Industrial Design Center, IIT Mumbai, and Indian Institute of Crafts, Jaipur. He has also taught at Rhode Island School of Design, USA, Nova Scotia College of Arts, Canada, Christchurch College of Arts, New Zealand and Indus Valley School of Arts and Architecture, Pakistan. Presently, he is serving as adjunct faculty member at the Symbiosis Institute of Design (SID) and MIT Institute of Design, both of which are in Pune.

Mr. Patel has won several awards, amongst which the most recent is the highly respected Gutenberg International Award for his contribution in font designing for Indian scripts, and map design and signage design for Indian cities. He was also recognized as the Grand Master of design in 2007 by the Industrial Design Centre of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Mumbai. He has worked on font design of six Indian scriptures – Devanagari, Gujarati, Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu and Bengali – and is planning to work on more.

He was gracious enough to answer some of our questions when he was in our campus.

What led you to become a designer?

I was good at drawing right from my childhood. My teachers always encouraged me, which helped me immensely. It helped me gain confidence. And at the advice of a good friend I took fine arts and landed in Baroda to study the same.

When or why did you shift to graphic design?

I finished my graduation and went to join my father’s business. I thought I will help him in his business and pursue painting on the side. However, I soon realized, it wasn’t my cup of tea. I was confused as to what to do in life. So I went to my professor K.G. Subramaniam seeking advice. He said I had two options: either to become an art teacher (which I didn’t want to) or go meet Gera Sarabai, who he said, was looking for people like me. I figured I had nothing to lose so I went to meet her. I gave the interview and showed my portfolio. She really liked my work. She asked me if I would like to join as a graphic design consultant at the National Institute of Design. Although I had no idea what graphic design was, I agreed. Gradually, I turned to letter design and typography. Around that time, Adrien Frutiger from Paris was visiting India. He was interested in exploring Type Design and its opportunities. I had this idea of working with Indian scripts. When I suggested it to him, he appreciated my idea and invited me to work with him in Paris. I learned a lot while working with him.

What is it that you like most about DYPDC?

I appreciate your sharp focus on Automobile Design. There is also a heavy emphasis on research and development, which is evident from your workshop, prototyping and testing facilities. I am also very impressed by the approach towards education, the way it is so practical in nature.

What according to you is the best design?

The best design is the one where the designer goes unnoticed. It should have a strong service focus, user purpose, and functional design. Design should provide uniqueness and an individual identity to businesses. One thing that bothers me is that we are still imitating the West when it comes to design, but we don’t understand that there design has become an art form, while here it still needs to be functional first.

What’s your one advice to aspiring designers?

My advice to them would be learn the fundamentals first and then experiment. And always keep your eyes open to all the changes taking place around you.

Posted in DYPDC - 2011 - Tagged adjunct faculty, Ahmedabad, and Indian Institute of Crafts, Bangalore, Baroda; Srishti College of Arts and Design, Canada, Christchurch College of Arts, DYPDC, DYPDC Center for automotive research and studies, Fine Arts, IIT Mumbai, Industrial Design Center, Jaipur, MIT Institute of Designautomotive design, Mudra Institute of Communications, New Zealand and Indus Valley School of Arts and Architecture, Nova Scotia College of Arts, Pakistan, Prof. Mahendra Patel, Pune, Rhode Island School of Design, Symbiosis Institute of Design, USA, visual order, visual order seminar, workshop

The Most Definitive Workshop in Retail Strategy Focused on Automotive Domain

Dec02
2010
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We are extremely pleased to announce that DYPDC Center for Automotive Research and Studies, Pune, in association with TU Delft University, Netherlands, will conduct a two-day interactive workshop, titled, Future of Automotive Retail on Dec 03 and 04, 2010, at DYPDC Center for Automotive Research and Studies campus in Pune.

This interactive workshop, through short lectures and assignments, case studies, and practical work sessions, will help organizations take their retailing strategy to a whole new level. The workshop will provide participants with core principles, tools, models, and techniques of Automotive Retail, and in the process enable them to apply their learning in their own organizations.

The workshop is being led by world renowned name in the field of Retail Strategy, Sir Rodney Fitch. Prof. Henri Christiaans (Associate Professor, Industrial Design at TU Delft), James Woudhuysen (Professor of Forecasting and Innovation at De Montfort University, Leicester,) Elmer van Grondelle (Head of the Automotive Design Department at Delft University), and Emanuele Nicosia (Professor, Automotive Design, DYP-DC Center for Automotive Research and Studies) are some of the other internationally acclaimed experts who will immensely benefit the participants.

Participants will learn how to create a viable retail strategy for their business, generate and implement ideas to develop or improve services and customer experience. They will also receive a clear understanding of retail strategy process, and learn practical innovation techniques and the confidence to use them immediately. By the end of the workshop participants will have an understanding of implicit strategic challenges, and most importantly, a foundation for addressing them in the future.

Visit http://puneevents.in/index.html for more details

Posted in December 2010 - Tagged automotive retail, brand design, dilip chhabria, DYPDC College, Elmer van Grondelle, Emanuele Nicosia, Henri Christiaans, international experts, James Woudhuysen, Pune, Rodney Fitch, TU Delft, world renowned speakers

The Great Chris Bangle

Nov29
2010
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The Great Chris Bangle
The Great Chris Bangle
The Great Chris Bangle
The Great Chris Bangle
The Great Chris Bangle
The Great Chris Bangle

The Great Chris Bangle
The Great Chris Bangle
The Great Chris Bangle
The Great Chris Bangle
Mr. Jagpreet, Mr. Chris Bangle, Mr.Abhishek & Mr.Chandra Prasad
Mr. Jagpreet, Mr. Chris Bangle, Mr.Abhishek & Mr.Chandra Prasad


“Bangle is arguably the most influential auto designer of his generation.”

– Phil Patton, New York Times, February 20, 2006.

And one look at Bangle’s work is enough to conclude that Patton isn’t exaggerating. Bangle is and will continue to be one of the icons in the automotive industry, for no one else has had the kind of impact he has had in the field of automobile design. Bangle started his career at Opel after graduating from Art Center College of Design, Pasadena. His next stop was Fiat, where he designed the Coupe Fiat. In 1992, BMW named him Chief of Design. He was the first American to be offered this position. It is his excellent, fearless work with BMW is what he is known for the most.

Some of the faculty members of DYPDC Center for Automotive Research and Studies caught up with Chris Bangle when he was in India recently, and had the great fortune of indulging in chit-chat about design and his philosophy, amongst other things.

Mentioned below is the transcribed version of their interaction.

According to Chris there are quite a few elements that make a design stand apart, that make it distinct, unique in comparison to others. It has to have an element of brilliance. Jaws should drop. It should be the first one to solve an existing problem. So in that sense, it has to be futuristic. The design should be timeless and distinct. It should be so awe-inspiring that it shifts paradigms, in the bargain, inspiring others. It should have this quality that makes others want to be “it”.

Chris said to be a successful designer one needs to learn to challenge everyday doing; to respect convention but not be bound by it. He said culture does play an extremely important part in shaping a person. It plays a crucial role in design as well, he said. He advised designers to be aware of it; to be courageous most of all and not be afraid to do what you really want to do.

He also spoke about the things a designer should keep in mind while designing a car. He said he would like to discourage in designers the thought that there’s something called a “women’s” car, and that if you make one, no one will buy it. He advised designers to never fall in this mindset or be racist against small cars. Also designers should always follow proportions surface detail while designing, he added.

When it came to his design strategy, he said he followed 10 steps, which are as follows:

Step 1: Understanding the dogmas: i.e. what I am, what I am not

Step 2: Finding the metaphor

Step 3: Re-thinking the metaphor

Step 4:

(a): Just thinking…a lot

(b): Thinking what culture can do

(c): USP

Step 5: Making a bold Conclusion (here he talked about 7 series, Bangle Butt)

Step 6: Evolving Metaphor

Step 7: Defining in action

Step 8: Preparing to take heat (talked about the job of a design head)

Step 9: Leveraging my resources

Step 10: Empowering my team

The faculty of DYPDC Center for Automotive Research and Studies are absolutely thrilled that they got to spend time with one of the greats of automobile design and are already looking forward to meeting Bangle the next time he’s in town.

Posted in November 2010 - Tagged automobile research, chris bangle, DC design school, design school, design workshop, dilip chhabria, DYPDC Center for automotive research and studies, dypdc faculty

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