Vision Thing: The best-designed vehicles on the market today

Cameron Neveu

I’ve had the privilege of writing Vision Thing for you for a little while now, and although we’ve covered a lot of ground in car design, there’s much still uncovered. It occurred to me the other day when I was showering: I haven’t really given you an insight into which cars I think have a really standout design—and why.

(You never know when these thoughts are going to hit you; this why you should always carry a notebook. Probably not into the shower, though.)

This time of the year, there are a lot of list articles about, and I’m not one to leave a bandwagon un-jumped on for my readers’ sakes. I know I’ve mentioned a few tangentially both above and below the line, but I will now wheel my own opinions out into the harsh glare of the studio strip lights for a design critique session.

What follows then, is a brief list of standouts currently (or soon to be) available to buy, each of which should make a sizable dent in your kid’s college fund. If you’re thinking about any of these and need an excuse to take to the finance committee, tell them a professional said each is a future design classic.

Lexus LC 500

2021 Lexus LC 500 Convertible side profile shadow light at yacht club
Jordan Lewis

Sometimes a manufacturer struggles with a design language for years, trying to make it work over several different models, before finally the right canvas comes along and it all suddenly makes sense.

Cadillac tried for years with its Art & Science philosophy before finally nailing it on the 2013 ATS. The concept version of the Lexus LC, the LF-LC, showed us in 2012 what its L-finesse language was going to look like—swooping surfaces that twisted in all directions, a massive spindle grille.

It was fabulous.

Unfortunately, the first production Lexus sporting L-finesse clothes was not a big grand tourer but an urban crossover, the NX, which looked like it had been rolled down the stairs. The same story repeated itself with subsequent product releases, but when we got the LC 500 in 2017, it all came together (again) magnificently.

The height of the cowl above the bottom of the side daylight opening (DLO) is much higher than normal, but this allows the metal in front of the door mirror to roll smoothly to the horizontal to meet the hood. It lends the whole car an F1-style forward rake. The dimensions temper the aggressiveness.

Even the trademark spindle grille works in this application. Searingly modern and unmistakably Japanese, it looks like nothing else on the road.

The LC 500 feels like the kind of car Jaguar should be making if it had the daring. But to call the LC a Japanese Jaguar is to sell it short: Gaydon would never be this bold.

The LC 500 is probably my favorite new car on sale, if you’re stuck for something to get your favorite auto-design writer for Christmas.

Ford Maverick

2022 Ford Maverick front three-quarter action
Cameron Neveu

At first, I didn’t totally get the Maverick, a small truck that wasn’t really all that rugged. There were plenty of options for pickup buyers already, although not at this price point.

Then it dawned on me. The Maverick is a direct replacement for the Focus. It’s even built off the same platform. A pickup for the non-traditional pickup buyer.

Suddenly, it all made perfect sense. Eschewing the overt brashness that characterizes basically every other open-backed vehicle on the market, the Maverick is a handsome vehicle with crisp detailing and surfacing that will take you to work without turning your spine to cookie crumbs, and be ready to get mucky on the weekend.

Arguably the Maverick’s best feature is that eye-catching MSRP: $23,690, as of this writing, for a 2023 model. You need a component catalog the size of Ford’s coupled with its economies of scale to get down that low. The strategy is clever as opposed to ruthless and cost-cut. There’s nothing you don’t really need—the base model even comes with old-fashioned steelies. When these become more widely available the aftermarket is going to wild with them, 3-D printers a-whirring.

A sensible, economical, good-looking, and practical commuter vehicle that happens to be a pickup? America, your 1980 Fiat Panda has arrived.

Toyota Prius

New Prius Prototype white
Toyota

Okay. Hands up on who saw this coming? I certainly didn’t.

Toyota stunned everyone when it showed us the 2024 Prius in November. For four generations the Prius has been a worthy but polarizing car, bought by people who took conservation very seriously and wanted everyone to know it. A slightly unnecessary, aerodynamic hunch leant it the appearance of an oversized computer mouse. It was hardly the last word in style. Until now.

The whole part-electric powertrain deal no longer being a novelty (nearly every car on this list is available as a hybrid in one form or another), Toyota has wisely shed the yurts and yoghurt vibe and given us a Prius that no longer trades on economy but on looks. It’s like seeing the server you smiled at in Whole Foods dressed to kill in a swanky downtown cocktail bar.

Squints hard. Prius, is that you?

It’s a much lower, wedgier car for 2024. The high point of the roof has been pulled right back to the rear passenger compartment, which in this or any segment is unheard of. This allows the cant rail to dive seamlessly into the A-pillar.

Volume has been added into the hood at the center line, and the abrupt cut-off tail of previous versions toned down considerably. This no longer feels like a car that places economy above all other considerations, and in sign of growing design confidence, Toyota have cheekily referenced the Ferrari SF90 front headlight graphic.

Surprised? I dropped my wheatgrass smoothie.

Lincoln Navigator

Lincoln

About a year ago my Range Rover Sport slipped into my life. About a day later, off it went into my heart. I bonded with it in a way I never did with my previous daily, an Audi TT.

“Designers are all style over function,” my ass!

Even though mine is a 2011, the Range Rover still has a regal on-road presence and is full of thoughtful touches (and one or two infuriating ones, such as no rear-passenger compartment lighting!). It simply goes about its business quietly and competently. No, I don’t take it off-road, but have you seen the state of the nation’s tarmac recently? I’ll take that day-to-day isolation, thanks.

Ford has not been averse to lifting Range Rover design cues for its bigger SUVs in the past, but with the Navigator, released in 2018 and refreshed last year, Lincoln has a model that can go head-to-head with Gaydon’s best. Look hard enough, and you can see a little modern Range Rover in the Navigator’s body-side surfacing—that’s a compliment, not a demerit. This is domestic luxury that need apologize to no one.

To get a measure of how good the Navigator is, consider that Jeep had a free field goal with the new Grand Wagoneer—and missed it by miles. The Navigator’s wrap-around glazing DLO looks classy, all of a piece and fittingly expensive. The Wagoneer’s body-colored pillars, the exact opposite.

Decorated with just the right amount of chrome, the Navigator exudes American class and authority without going over the top, something that hasn’t always been true of high-end domestic cars in the past. I actually saw a photo of a Navigator in central London recently (probably a diplomat’s car) and you know what? It didn’t look out of place one bit.

As designers we have to accept that customers like SUVs and these days they are willing to trade the last couple of mpg to drive them. To that end, the Navigator doesn’t have a V-8. These cars will continue to exist, so we must make them as safe and fuel-efficient as possible. That they generate good profit margins and support American jobs is something to be celebrated as well.

Ferrari 296 GTB

Ferrari 296 GTB front three-quarter
Ferrari

So we finally got the V-6 baby Ferrari that’s been rumored for who knows how many years. Except it’s not really a baby at all, slotting somewhere into the middle of Maranello’s ever more-confusing range. No matter. The 296 is simply the best-looking Ferrari in an absolute age. It is gorgeous.

That’s not something that can be said of many recent efforts from chief designer Flavio Manzoni. Although generally good in profile and proportion, his vehicles have been extremely complex in the detailing. Surfaces desecrated with nicks and cuts, awkward lamp graphics, and, in the case of the rather plain Roma, the best car Aston Martin never made. Ferrari’s been twisting the marque in knots to create ever more-special editions and even now an SUV.

This is important. Ferrari’s rivals at McLaren have been hampered by spinning a range of indeterminate models off of the essentially the same kit of parts; the carbon-fiber cell and the 3.8-liter twin turbo V-8. Maranello shouldn’t have this problem, given the range of engines and layouts at its disposal: You should know straight away if you’re looking at the mid-engined, entry-level V-8 one, the front-engined, V-12 GT one, whatever the range topper is, and so on. Recently, that hasn’t been the case for Ferrari. At a car show in the fall, a designer friend and I were standing behind an SF90 wondering if we’d got the model designation right.

The 296GTB is a refreshing return to a classically beautiful aesthetic that belies the technical complexity beneath. The nose has one wide, mesh-filled opening, flanked by two smaller air curtains on each side and a smaller, lower central one. It’s simple without being simplistic, an attitude which is very hard to get right. The hips’ air vents are models of restraint, impressive given what the airflow requirements of this thing must be. Rather than punch more holes in the rear body work or increase the size of the rear lights, the rear fog and reflectors are brilliantly and subtly incorporated into the upward surface of the diffuser.

Minimalist without being minimal, this is one of those cars that can only be ruined by the inevitable go-faster version with tacked-on aero kit. What was I saying about that Lexus?

Honorable mentions: Land Rover Defender

2020 Land Rover Defender Gondwana
Brandan Gillogly

It’s been with us for three years. Was it what we expecting? The evergreen original combined Blake’s Satanic mills with British sheer bloody-mindedness. We were never going to get a newer version of that. The workhorse role it was designed for has long since been taken over by base model pickups and ATVs, so how to keep this most beloved nameplate relevant?

By creating a frighteningly modern-looking, tough, capable SUV that, in lower trims at least (get the steel wheels!), maintains some of the class transcendence that characterized the original. The Defender looks like nothing else on the road and shows up the Ineos Grenadier up for the fool’s errand it is.

Honorable mentions: Alfa Romeo Giulia

2022 Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio front three-quarter track action
Brandan Gillogly

I would have put the Mazda6 here, because it remains for me the blueprint for a mid-market sporting saloon, but that body is now ten years old. (It’s also no longer available domestically.)

When I first saw the Giulia, my reaction was Alfa Romeo should have had the Mazda in Alfa Centro Stile as inspiration instead of whatever they did use. But if ever a car looked better in the flesh than photos, the Giulia is it.

Just refreshed for 2022, it was famously crash-designed and developed by a dedicated tiger team after Sergio ordered a do-over. Little wonder that initial cars had teething problems. But it’s one of those cars that makes pause and smile every time I see one out on the road. Tautly organic, faintly muscular, and delicately detailed, the Giulia makes its German rivals look decidedly ordinary.

Adrian Clarke Dodge Challenger SRT 392 rental
Adrian Clarke

I purposely didn’t mention the Dodge Challenger in this list, because if you’ve kept up with my columns, you’ll know my feelings for that particular slice of Mopar design brilliance. Truth is, there are a lot of decent-looking vehicles available for sale right now. Not everything needs to be a design revolution or market disruptor—sometimes getting the basics right, and being solidly handsome, well-marketed, and ably developed is enough.

Hopefully these will give you some inspiration for the January sales (if such a thing will happen in today’s weird new-car market). If not, next time, I’ll tease you with some of my design choices that you can’t buy.

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Comments

    Only time will tell. Stuff that people discounted years ago (malaise era) are wanted now. The problem will be trying to keep anything late model running when the electronics die and there are no replacements. That and plastic replacement on cars without an aftermarket following.

    About 3 weeks ago, I ordered a 2023 Ford Maverick XLT with the Eco boost 4 cyl. engine. 8 speed automatic trans. I added 5 extras to the stock modal. The total costs is $26, 300 with no dealer costs added. Just for your info.

    Hmm… I have always felt that the Navigator was the better of the two luxury american beasts by a long shot. I could never put my finger on why, but the Navigator just had a certain panache the Escalade never quite obtained. Of course Ford nailed the Maverick, but I am not sure it will be a future classic. The Lexus I think might be the first Lexus I would consider in the future. I don’t like the front end straight on, but I don’t like any of the new big grill no bumper styled cars.

    The 296GTB. Wow. Everything I ever loved about the Dino, more modern, more speedy looking, and that touch of panache that sets it apart from the others. Santa may I have one please. It wasn’t in the garage when I got up this morning for my Birthday so you are my last home.

    How could you leave out the Kia EV6 from this list? It is one of the best looking SUVs out there, let alone best looking electrics. Find one in white and you’ll be hard pressed to find a design flaw (except maybe a better rim:wheel design). This is what the Ford’s electric Mustang should have looked like (and not named Mustang). The only thing Kia could have done better is have the Subaru Solterra off-road capabilities (an electric SUV that can actually go off road – see Road and Track’s review of it). The next mfg that combines the Kia’s looks with the Subaru’s capabilities as an EV is gonna rule the market . . . if the can keep the price right.

    I’ll buy a AWD Maverick Hybrid when its been produced and depreciated in about five years (assuming it produced in the next two years). Demand will be too great for the obvious potential to not. The new Prius is about time, but now all they need to figure out is a retractable hardtop and it’ll compete with the best out there: a Mazda Miata. Efficiency and fun is a pretty good combination. Excess not so much.

    The six future design classics. Laughable, the Maverick perhaps but the rest…
    Range River anything can’t be a classic because it has no longevity, utter garbage

    Would you believe it, Toyota has decided not to import the Prius into the UK……

    A decision as disappointing and hard to understand as Toyota’s decision not to bring the GR Yaris into the US.

    What will UK Uber drivers do?

    Think I will stay with my 2010 Ford Ranger. It is still without a ding and worth more than what I paid for it. I purchased it from the dealer without a test drive. However, the dealer made me drive it from the back lot to the office area so they could tape a paper in the window. The first thing I did was change the rear end to a 410 ratio and dropped it about 3″ all around and a set of Arrow wheels and BF Goodrich tires. Little thing scats and doesn’t look like it wants to fall over, and, it fits in the garage. Besides all that, I cannot afford a Ferrari, and if I could, I would keep the truck.

    The LC 500 is a stunning coupe or convertible. Everything about it looks great. Drives well and sounds fabulous. Same engine is in the IS 500 which is probably the best looking compact sedan out right now.

    Maverick: A triumph of Marketing, not Design.
    LC 500: A head-turner and future classic, no question. The photo chosen to accompany the article did the Lexus no favors.
    296 GTB: Completely agree….from the A-pillar forward. Can nobody fix the train wreck that is the B-pillars rearward of every mid-engine V-8 Ferrari of the last six years? I mean seriously, it’s like the teenage boy slipping a sock in his trousers to impress the girls (not that Ferrari are the only ones guilty of this). Perhaps Mr. Manzoni should take a peek at what his counterparts at Maserati and Lotus are doing these days….(or maybe just the 208 GTB Turbo in his own garage).
    Giuila: We’re going to have to agree to disagree here. How Marco Tencone designed a shape that is simultaneously taught and fluid is remarkable. One of the last decade’s design highlights in my book. The Mazda 6? It suffers from the “Me Too” massive grille movement. There’s a reason Mr. Farina gave us horizontal grilles. 😉

    I feel the opposite. The Navigator is the least appealing of all the large luxury SUV’s. It is an outdated look. I would never consider one. GM didn’t screw up (surprisingly) designing their 3 large SUV’s. Escalade and Yukon look great and drive great. But in my opinion, Jeep nailed it with the Wagoneer lineup. That is why my money was spent on a 22 Wagoneer. Challenger should have been on this list! Best looking car on the market.

    Exactly!! I have rented the Lincoln , Escalade and the gmc, chevy stuff everywhere our family goes… our Grand Wagoneer is a 7,000 lb sports car……. Sometimes I feel the suspension in sport mode is better than my WB Hellcat.

    I’ve written about the Challenger before which is why I didn’t include it, but yes it was and remains an absolute stunner.

    The C8 is a mess, but it’s appeal doesn’t really lie in it’s design. The Alfa has been around a lot longer and the Prius is such a quantum leap forward over it’s predecessor it would be churlish not to recognise that.

    Lot of good comments here. My current issue with some of the newer cars, particularly the Japanese, but also the new BMW’s, seem to have caught the Huge Grille Disease (HGD). BMW has always had such perfectly proportioned grilles. Sad to see such a nice car with HGD.

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