Speaking to the media after the official unveiling of the FT-4X, Cartabiano said: “We always design [Calty’s concepts] to be at the 75 per cent stage. We can make this thing.”
The designer stated Toyota’s “production engineering has really stepped up their game” and “if we can make C-HR, we can make this thing”. He did caution the company will “wait and see what the reaction is”.
Cartabiano nominated the hatch as his favourite feature of the concept vehicle, and took particular pride in showing off how its top hinge is mounted within the high-mount brake light.
“The hatch could be doable, but obviously we’d have to engineer a few issues out. We got it to work mechanically on this [concept]. At Toyota, if we want to make something, we can. We just need that push,” he said.
Inspiration for the hatch apparently came from interviews with surfers in Marin county, California, who were sitting on the tailgates of their old 4Runners.
“My [introductory] line about the rear is the new front, that’s not bullshit. We literally started with the rear … and designed a totally usable, functional tailgate for this thing, and the rest falls into place,” Cartabiano said.
“Being the designer of the C-HR, I always imagined [it] as the city mouse, with the FT-4X as the country mouse. They’re very similar, but this car has more interior volume, and more usable space. It’s mission is different,” he replied.
“The key to simple design is that it has look good dirty. I think this car is going to look kick-ass dirty. I don’t think C-HR should ever get dirty. It’s a philosophical difference. And although the dimensions are similar, [this one] has steeper ramp angles at either end. They have the same wheel size, but the tyres are a little bit beefier.”
The designer also claims the FT-4X has enough usable space that you could camp inside it. In developing the FT-4X, the Calty team spoke to millennials for “a couple weeks”, and they said that weren’t interested in climbing Everest, but were more interested in visiting Joshua Tree, camping at Yosemite or checking out Death Valley. At that point, Cartabiano claims the design team changed its focus from “hardcore to casual core”. RELATED POST