New Honda S2000 Concept Blows Cover at BIMS

Honda OSM Concept

Hybrid and 4 Seats?

By Thami Masemola
July 22, 2008 6:26 am
Filed Under: British Motor Show, Concept Car, Honda, Japanese

Honda is doing a straight 180 on the next S2000, judging by the concept car revealed at the BIMS today. The Honda S2000, a dynamic marvel with that screaming 2.0-litre engine and excellent short-throw 6-speed gearbox, has been due for a new model for some time now, as rivals keep bettering their offerings. The concept uses Honda’s hybrid technology, although our feeling is this would not be the engine of choice when the street car debuts.

Featuring integrated rear lights, a flowing bodyline and a shape clearly related to the Civic hatch, the S2000 concept seems to have been shortened and its stance widened. There seems to be a lot of flow in the lines, giving the car cleaner, more seamless looks. Interior again, is a Civic relative of some note, peppered with blue background lighting, digital speed readout and utility buttons. And the concept is no longer a roadster; we see space for two baby hobbits at the back. No sign of where the roof goes though, and none of whether said roof is made of canvass or tin either.

Source: Honda (UK)

Press Release (Click to expand)

LOW EMISSION HONDA ROADSTER BREAKS COVER

Two-seat design study unveiled at British International Motor Show

Honda’s low-emission sportscar study model has been revealed at the British International Motor Show, at ExCeL, London.

The lightweight roadster design study displays one of Honda’s core engineering principles – to design stylish and exciting cars that are also environmentally responsible.

Named the OSM (for Open Study Model), the two-seater joins the confirmed-for-production CR-Z sports hybrid and FCX Clarity hydrogen fuel cell car on the Honda stand at the show.

“We’re trying to show that low emission cars can be attractive,” says Andreas Sittel, Project Leader for OSM. “There is no reason why a car that’s more environmentally friendly can’t look great too – and be sporty and fun to drive.”

The concept for the project was ‘Clean and Dynamic’ – and this direction was followed for both the exterior and interior design, ensuring a joined-up, consistent ‘language’ between the two. One example of this can be seen at the rear of the car, where the body actually extends into the cabin between the seats.

The exterior design is a balance of smooth, rounded curves and sharp lines to provide definition in key areas. The headlights are cleverly integrated into the front end, stretching from the nose to the top of the wheel arches to look more like a part of the original body.

Inside, this uninterrupted, fluid approach is continued, with long sweeping curves extending from both door panels to form a frame for the instrument display. The concept for the dashboard was to avoid creating the traditional block of ‘heavy’ colour and material in front of the driver; in keeping with the clean and lightweight theme. For that reason, the dash is broken into sections, with the most important instruments in direct line-of-sight of the driver.

Key information is displayed in a rounded, enclosed central binnacle, with levels and figures in bright blue on a black background. This matches the trim inside the car, with the seats and door furniture trimmed in a new, gloss-effect blue leather, accompanied by white leather sections, in line with the exterior body colour, a one-off paint called Mystic Pearl.

The driver’s main controls and functions are distributed in an intuitive layout, close at hand on a panel that curves downwards to the right of the driver. A centrally-mounted semi-sequential gear-shift points towards a fun-to-drive transmission, along with paddle shifts either side of the steering wheel. Integrated into the gearshifter itself is a red ignition ‘start’ button, which reinforces the sporty direction of the car.

The Honda OSM was designed by Honda’s R&D facility in Offenbach, Germany. It’s the latest example of the young talent being developed within Honda’s design studios in Europe – following the Honda Small Hybrid Sports Concept (Geneva 2007) and the Accord Tourer Concept (Frankfurt 2007).

At present, the Honda OSM is a design study model, and there are no plans for it to enter production.

Comments (page 1 of 2)

Thunderkiss
July 22, 2008 11:30 am
Nice. The side shot reminds me of the Alfa sypder of a few years ago.

wolff
July 22, 2008 2:32 pm
Bingo.. same thoughts!! :D

Lutzie
July 30, 2008 11:30 pm
Sort of... but this is dumpier and not so pretty

kevoluetion
July 22, 2008 11:37 am
Peugeot? Interior looks cheap

dmanero
July 22, 2008 11:53 am
please tell me this ain't the new s2000. Horrible, looks bloted too short.

I think the obnly nice thing about this car is the front end. Other than they need to go back to the rawing board. They should consider rather doing a hard top roadster. Take the Solstice for instance. A ugly car to say the elast but with a hard top it looks a bit better.

sovietmole
July 22, 2008 12:36 pm
it looks so big and bulky

afterace2
July 22, 2008 12:34 pm
always wanted to cruise on my hometown with two baby hobbits at the back...

Joe_Limon
July 22, 2008 1:13 pm
rawr, I like the looks of this car. Why couldn't all small economy cars look this nice?

AG4
July 22, 2008 1:18 pm
They should call this (FWD?)concept a CRX or Del Sol, not an S2000.

Xanavi23
July 22, 2008 1:21 pm
It would be nice, but the silhouette from the side, on the top side is too round, needs to be sleeker.

eas722
July 22, 2008 2:10 pm
it definately wont be the s2000, will be something like the new Del Sol

carcrazy1234
July 22, 2008 2:18 pm
haha wow some of you have no idea what honda has to go through here lol. Seriously i'd love to see any of you haters design a better car, or even interior. However, this is a very...."non" S2000 kinda car, but also this is only a concept. They'll only take design cues from this and use it (hopefully). I personally hate car companies that "join" the rear lights though. cheap, ugly. hopefully they use the front 3/4 part of this car for the S2000. it's gonna be hard for them to make a car as good as the current S2000.

Tuner_Mad
July 22, 2008 2:33 pm
Nice, this is a cute sports car by honda. I think that the future of Budget sports cars should be more like this with petrol prices flying.

Joe_Limon
July 23, 2008 1:10 am
pfft, have you ever even calculated to figure out how much you spend per year on gas? The way people talk about it, it's like they are now spending over $10,000 a year on it.

RobERob
July 22, 2008 2:53 pm
Talk about a bad second impression. I thought I liked this concept a lot but after seeing it again, I'm not so sure. The back is just weird/awkward. I'm also not sure how they can improve on the current S2K (if that is what this is), performance-wise, but a 3 liter dohc ivtec engine would be a good start. As far as the rear tail light goes, I think they got a little confused and put it on the wrong car. It doesn't make much sense here. Overall, I say drop the +2 nonfunctioning rear seating, keep the wider stance and rwd, increase engine size, and give this thing some shape instead of just flipping a bath tub up side down.

RobERob
July 22, 2008 2:56 pm
I do like the front though!

carcrazy1234
July 22, 2008 10:13 pm
hahah good call on the "bath tub" part haha wow so true

THERENAISSANCEMAN
July 22, 2008 2:59 pm
there must have been a mistake made somewhere as the previously issued artistic impression was infinitely more sportingly contoured than this actual facsimilie. what a letdown !

THERENAISSANCEMAN
July 22, 2008 3:13 pm
either a classic case of misleading advertisement , or Honda is losing fast its sense of proportion . i strongly suggest Honda appoint the car perspectivist to become its technical director of exterior design/bodyshell development as the original concept was hopelessly reduced to that of an AlfaRomeo clone .

July 22, 2008 4:36 pm
Ew. The outgoing model looks infinitely better.

"...a shape clearly related to the Civic hatch..." who decided that would be a good idea?

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