Jaguar Execs: We Return to Our Roots by Ignoring Them

Larry Printz

Jaguar sparked controversy over the last few weeks ahead of the Miami reveal of its new design direction, one that will see the automaker discard much of what is familiar to its car buyers and brand enthusiasts, including its internal combustion engines.

As inventories of Jaguar’s existing products draw down, the automaker is relaunching using battery-electric drivelines exclusively. Such a momentous change called for a rethink of the brand’s design approach, one that had become mired in what had come before. The surprise that buyers felt upon seeing the first XK 120, E-Type, XJ6, or XJS was gone. The result was a tumultuous sales slide. In 2003, Jaguar sold nearly 55,000 cars in the U.S. Two decades later, it struggled to sell 8200.

This is what drove Jaguar to re-establish the brand’s place in the luxury car market, starting with a design that broke from its strangulated recent past. Under the stewardship of Gerry McGovern, chief creative officer for Jaguar Land Rover, Jaguar is throwing off the heritage-based design language that company founder Sir William Lyons would not have approved of: Lyons thought nothing of discarding a current design language for a more modern one that owed little to what had come before.

Jaguar Design McGovern & Type 00
Gerry McGovern, chief creative officer for JLR, presenting the Type 00 in Miami.Larry Printz

“Jaguar has its roots in originality. In the past, it was known for its visionary, unique esthetic and groundbreaking designs,” said McGovern at the unveiling of the Type 00. “Think about the E-Type when it was first shown, and how it would have been perceived at that time. It was truly a copy of nothing.”

This is what led the team to design the Jaguar Type 00, its name a reference to the brand’s total reset.

Jaguar Design Design Team
Larry Printz

“It was very much clear of what we wanted to do, something that very bold,” said Constantino Segui Gilabert, chief exterior designer for Jaguar. “Gerry was insisting on having something very progressive. So he gave us that freedom.”

Typically, without an engine in front, today’s designers are leaning toward cab-forward design, leading to a homogenous look to most EVs. But in a truly radical approach for a new electric vehicle, designers kept the classic long-hood, short-cabin proportions.

“We did not have much of an issue of having that classic proportions, because we actually thought that there was kind of like an unusual thing to do for [an] electric car,” Gilabert said. “We felt that that was quite an interesting approach for us.”

The Type 00’s front fascia, too, is a departure from the small frontal area most EVs seem to embrace. Regardless, both the front and rear fascias are “very close” to those on the four-door GT Jaguar plans to unveil in late 2025. That includes the tailgate design, one that lacks a rear window. Instead, side-mounted cameras deploy only when needed.

Yet the Type 00 has a holistic design, despite a design team some 800 strong.

“We were really keen from the beginning to have a design that really looked like it just came from one pair of pants. We really wanted this car to feel as one,” said Tom Holden, Jaguar’s chief interior designer. “And as those sketches were developing, you know, we’re working together, bouncing ideas off each other.”

This led to a unification of the exterior and interior by carrying what Jaguar calls the strikethrough, which is a field of parallel lines, from the hood into the cabin atop the instrument panel. It also led to some intriguing design touches, such as screens that fold down when you don’t want to look at them, leaving only a small readout with essential information at the base of the windshield. The strikethrough motif is also used on the front and rear fascias, and on the redesigned leaper ingot on each side of the car. Jaguar intends this to be a new styling hallmark.

The interior sports some unusual materials, including brass. The inspiration came from the redesign’s initial codename, Renaissance.

jaguar type 00 concept 2024 interior
Jaguar

“We started looking at the original Renaissance, and we were finding a lot of references to brass within that,” said Mary Crisp, chief materiality designer at Jaguar. It’s a material that changes with time, celebrating its past as its patina changes.

“That really sparked an idea about automotive materials and why do we expect them to be the same from day one to 10 years later, said Crisp. “Why can’t things change over time?”

While you shouldn’t expect to see brass in the version sold to the public, Crisp says they are employing some unique solutions to interior finishes for the production car.

Altogether, the carmaker unveiled a machine that looks unlike any other Jaguar that has come before it, albeit one with a decidedly masculine appearance. One thinks that Sir William Lyons would have approved.

“It really goes back to this idea of how do you take that fearless creative spirit and reimagine it, transform it for a completely new audience, a new generation?” said Richard Stevens, Jaguar brand design director.

“If you think about our heyday, we never conformed, we never followed convention, but we never compromised on everything that we designed, from the exuberant proportions of a vehicle to the finest details. And for us, it goes back to this thing about context.”

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Comments

    Jaguar’s roots – a return?? Oil leaking, overheating, smoke blowing mechanical, and electrical failures when least convenient? Why return to that??

    Yep, nothing says “Copy Nothing” like a long nose 2-door fastback 🙄

    If anything it looks like the unwanted love child of a Jag F-Type and that noted exercise in corporate folly, the Cadillac XLR

    “That really sparked an idea about automotive materials and why do we expect them to be the same from day one to 10 years later, said Crisp. “Why can’t things change over time?”

    That guy had never driven, or been near, a three year old GM product.
    What looks great in a new Cadillac looks pretty low rent a few years later.

    The one intriguing design concept I see is getting the flipping screen(s) out of the way so one can see the road and DRIVE.

    Looks like something Pixar did. It just needs eyes in the windshield. When my grandkids saw it they said “ look, Jackson Storm”. Enough said.

    Sooo… the company that couldn’t muster the courage to build something that looks great (C-X75) decides to stomp into the design room, flip the table over, and lob brick shaped garbage out to the masses?

    The moronic execs sound like some of those sadly-insecure folks you probably saw in school who make a fool of themselves with some overt clown-like display because any attention is better than no attention… except, it’s not.

    Further, does anyone in charge of Jag actually like cars? They seem to talk a lot about stuff other than making a car people want. It would be funny to hear what their favorite Jags are and why.

    Making flagship pretty sports cars and sedan/suv spinoffs works for Porsche. Instead of making ugly reductively avant-garde bricks to appeal to buyers that like stuff because others don’t, Jag should follow the Porsche model with a gorgeous sports car and some sedan/SUV blobs that emulate the design language. Jag won’t ever be as success as Porsche, but if they make cool, fast, pretty cars, people will buy. Also, ditch the stupid naming convention, there’s nothing sexy about saying “I drive an I-Pace” it sounds like the name of some medical device for incontinence.

    Looks like a 3D rendering using the cheapest free software they could find. It’s so ugly and ridiculous, it hurts my eyes to even look at it. Good luck trying to find buyers for that silly electric monstrosity, because the Jag loyalists surely won’t.

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