Cadillac CTS Coupe Concept Unveiled at NAIAS

Cadillac styling exerecise

Cadillac CTS Coupe Concept
by Chris Jackson
January 14, 2008 5:38 PM
Filed Under: American, Cadillac, Concept Car, Detroit Auto Show

According to VP of Design Ed Welburn, the CTS Coupe's design was almost an afterthought--a sketch that was made on a whim by the design team while they were finalizing the CTS sedan's looks.  Cadillac's distinctive, dramatic look translated so well to the coupe form that the sketch was pushed through to become this show car.  The high-tailed coupe features a sharper-edged look than the sedan, and it's even got a hint of tailfins in the tips of the taillamps.  The center-exiting exhaust echoes the shape of the Cadillac crest.  Although the CTS line could use a BMW and Audi coupe-fighter, the CTS Coupe is little more than a design excercise...for now. 

Source: Cadillac
Press Release (Click to expand)

Having earned critical acclaim, industry awards and brisk sales, Cadillac CTS has moved into the vanguard of contemporary design. In doing so, Cadillac designers faced the question of what to do next. Their answer celebrates that design legacy with the exhilarating Cadillac CTS Coupe Concept, which premiered at the 2008 North American International Auto Show.

The CTS Coupe takes Cadillac’s acclaimed Art and Science design language and adds more of both. More expressive, more technical and very personal, the CTS Coupe extends the dramatic design of its sedan predecessor with all-new sculpted bodywork aft of the front fenders.

“The CTS Coupe Concept is a dramatic design statement,” said Ed Welburn, VP, GM Global Design. “We did not create it as the result of sifting through reams of market data, nor is its shape trimmed to suit the input collected at a consumer clinic – it is emotion on four wheels and the very essence of what defines Cadillac today.”

The CTS Coupe Concept has a classic 2+2 interior layout, highlighted by black leather and microfiber trim that is complemented by yellow ochre-colored seat inserts and leather stitching. It is designed to accommodate a range of engines for the global luxury market, including Cadillac’s popular 3.6L Direct Injection V-6, as well as a new 2.9L turbo-diesel currently in development.

“This Coupe Concept is a natural extension of our design language, and of the CTS itself,” said Jim Taylor, Cadillac general manager. “Very simply, the dramatic design of the sedan begged the question of what it would look like in the unbridled form of a Coupe.”

Generated from the spark of the CTS design team’s imagination, the CTS Coupe casts a profile unlike anything else on the road. Its fast-rake styling – it has the same wheelbase as the CTS, but an overall height that is approximately two inches (51 mm) lower and an overall length that is two inches (51 mm) shorter – blends with hand-sculpted bodywork that bulges around the wheels, giving the vehicle a ready-to-pounce stance that is dramatic, powerful and sleek.

“Just about every decade, Cadillac designs a breakthrough car that becomes synonymous with the brand’s character of the period, such as the 1938 60 Special, the 1959 lineup, the 1975 Seville and the 2003 Sixteen Concept,” said Clay Dean, Cadillac’s global design director. “The CTS Coupe Concept is the next great design, carrying the baton from the Evoq Concept that ushered in the Art and Science era in 1999.”

A design gem

Among the CTS Coupe Concept’s signature design cues are a number of elements that suggest the look of a carefully cut diamond – particularly at the rear. These elements are seen in everything from the chrome header above the rear license plate holder to the indents that comprise the basic form of the rear fascia.

“The diamond-cut elements enhance the sleek profile of the car,” said John Manoogian II, director of exterior design for Cadillac. “The CTS Coupe uses the elements, along with other nods to classic Cadillac cues – such as vertical headlamps and taillamps – to acknowledge the brand’s heritage without resorting to nostalgia. It is a forward-looking design in every sense of the term.”

Although based on the sedan, the CTS Coupe shares only the instrument panel, console, headlamps, front fenders and grille with the production model. Unique elements include:

  • Classic hardtop styling, with no B-pillar

  • CTS production windshield laid at a faster angle to create a sleeker profile

  • Chrome, split seven-spoke wheel design; 20-inch front wheels and 21-inch rear wheels

  • Sculpted lower front fascia with unique brake-cooling vents

  • Slim-profile outside mirrors

  • XLR-type hidden door handles with proximity remote opening

  • Unique front fender vents

  • Diamond-cut rear fascia with mesh lower grilles and center-outlet exhaust

  • Taillamps with a subtle fin profile and are highlighted with LED lighting technology with light pipes

  • Rear spoiler integrated into the center high-mounted stop lamp

  • Sculpted roof-mounted antenna for OnStar, XM Satellite Radio, etc.

“The cliché is to say that there were no compromises in the design, but that is absolutely accurate in the case of the CTS Coupe,” said Manoogian. “Each line and angle of the bodywork was carefully honed, and the final design’s proportions were judged by the eyes of the design team, not computer-generated math data.”

The surfaces of CTS Coupe Concept are complex, inviting careful inspection. The rear fenders, for example, were sculpted by hand in the design studio until they provided a perfect, muscular form that wrapped tightly over the wheels. At the top, the rear fenders are beveled – owing to the diamond-cut theme – and become part of a horizontal plane that runs from the leading edge of the taillamps and merges into the roof.

“At first glance, the design appears effectively simple, because there are no extraneous moldings, spoilers or other protrusions, but the more you look at it, the more complex it becomes,” said Manoogian. “The angles and bevels were carefully carved to enhance the car’s sleek shape, but aren’t ‘busy’ or distracting – there’s really nothing quite like it.”

Personal passenger environment

A classic 2+2 interior environment enhances the CTS Coupe’s personal feel. It shares the hand cut-and-sewn instrument panel and center console with the CTS, but features unique front and rear seats, a continuous console running between the front and rear seats, and custom door panels.

“The CTS Coupe is a personal car – something a customer would choose to reward him or herself – and the passenger environment reflects that,” said Eric Clough, interior design director. “The interior uses the already excellent CTS design and takes it to a new, bolder level.”

Custom-trimmed sport seats from Recaro are located in all four positions. They support the grand-touring nature of the car and are covered in rich, black and suede-like microfiber material, with yellow ochre-colored inserts. The yellow ochre color provides dramatic contrast with the black surrounding trim, but is a subdued hue consistent with the interior’s overall feeling of refinement. Yellow ochre stitching also is used throughout, including the seats, instrument panel, shifter knob and more.

Black microfiber fabric covers the front armrest, as well as an armrest located between the rear seats. The armrests are part of a continuous console that stretches from the instrument panel to rear seats. Carbon-fiber trim accents the console. The interior also features ambient lighting throughout, creating a distinctive environment at night.

Like the sedan, the CTS Coupe Concept’s interior is home to a host of technologies, including a premium Bose audio system, 40-gigabyte hard drive and XM Satellite Radio. OnStar with Turn-by-Turn Navigation enhances the vehicle’s onboard navigation system, which – like the CTS – features a screen that rises out of the center of the instrument panel.

Performance-bred powertrain and suspension systems

As is the case with its design, the CTS Coupe extends the acclaimed capabilities of the sedan in terms of performance technology. This includes the capability to support a broad engine range of gasoline and diesel engines.

The CTS Coupe, of course, ascertains the sedan’s 3.6L V-6 engines, including the 304-horsepower (227 kW) Direct Injection power plant. The Coupe Concept also is designed for a new 2.9L turbo-diesel being developed for international markets. This new engine, tailored for use in the CTS, will deliver an estimated 250 horsepower (184 kW) and 406 lb.-ft. of torque (550 Nm).

A six-speed manual transmission backs the engine, sending torque to an independently sprung rear axle. The CTS Coupe’s sport-tuned suspension gives it a slightly lower ride height than a production CTS – a look enhanced by the car’s rakish shape and large, 20-inch front and 21-inch rear wheels.

Behind the chrome, split-spoke, aluminum alloy wheels is a set of high-performance brakes, featuring cross-drilled rotors. Six-piston calipers clamp down on the front rotors, while four-piston calipers grab the rear rotors. All of the rotors have a distinctive, yellow-painted finish.

 

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Comments

mcwong
January 14, 2008 6:20 PM
that looks sooo nice..... wow

MAB
January 14, 2008 6:56 PM
Wow - I expected the CTS-V to debut, but not the coupe. The car looks amazing and that profile is damned near perfection. Also, I have to commend Cadillac on their newer interiors, this looks great but the V is jaw-droppingly beautiful.

Now if they'd just attend to their other models. (Hint hint, use that new crossover concept to replace the aging SRX, please!)

JohnnyG
January 14, 2008 7:10 PM
Very nice, very clean profile. What are the engine specs going to be? I have to say, Cadillac has done a wonderful job on the interior of the new CTS. One of the best interiors I have seen. I really think GM got the hint from the interior complaints of the first gen CTS.

BENZian
January 14, 2008 8:48 PM
Stunning, powerful, sophisticated. Cadillac and GM keep rising. Please make the CTS coupe and turn the Provoq into the new SRX.

afterace2
January 14, 2008 11:15 PM
i don't know, maybe there is something wrong with me, but for me this car is a bit too short, it almost looks like a hatchback, unless this was the goal?

ck314
January 15, 2008 1:30 AM
Yeah, this bold compact shape would fit better among the 1-Series than the 3-Series Coupé, but it's still awesome eventhough the starting point (CTS sedan) was already a winner. Let's see if they have the balls to retain those impressive edgy contours on the production car. Well done Cadillac!

unknown
January 15, 2008 1:06 AM
looks good, but will people bite?

ck314
January 15, 2008 1:45 AM
Also, seeing this refined interior makes me wonder why Cadillac doesn't offer a customization department like its potential rivals do (MB Designo, BMW Individual, Audi quattro GmbH and so forth). Don't they realize that individuality is a key requirement in this premium segment? So much for American marketing guru's...

radmeister
January 15, 2008 5:04 AM
Well if you consider the price of those Individual options offered by those companies they are very pricy. You are better off instead to get a normal car from the factory and then go to aftermarket companies for paint/interior. What you pay for the Designo paint and interior you can get done with Luis Vuitton branded leather and a crazy House of Colours pearlescent paint for the same price if you go outside of MB. And i am sure that neither of those companies hand wet-sand the cars b4 painting all they do is change the colour code on the computer and when your VIN # enters the booth the robot automatically mixes the paint and paints it like any other car. And they are still not really individual you are still limited by what colours and leather you can select. If you want real individuality you go to a third party shop and get it done properly exactly how you want.

ck314
January 15, 2008 8:49 PM
Not all of them, for instance Audi or Porsche allows you to send a sample via airmail of any color you want, be it exterior or interior. And unless it's a very competent aftermarket company with outstanding skills (ie very expensive as well), it's not going to match the flawless factory finish. I agree most premium brands charge too much, but at those levels talking money is vulgar and they somehow take advantage of the situation. Not implying it's a rip off either.

StickForLife
January 15, 2008 6:41 PM
Spectacular! In concept form, this is one nice looking car, and I would have one in a heartbeat. The proportions are excellent, it's nice and aggressive and I really enjoy the sporty form of Cadillac's new interior. My only worry is that when they make the production model (and they'd be fools not to) the concept sharp lines could be dampened a bit. I'll be following this car very closely.

ck314
January 16, 2008 2:34 AM
Actually it's pretty much a modern reinterpretation of the AMC AMX back in the late '60s.

benzboy
February 1, 2008 9:53 AM
hav to agree very amc amx Javelin ut with a bigger,wider ass

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