Apple Car: Concept art imagines how the tech giant’s vehicle might look based on patent filings
Like a heat mirage shimmering over the road ahead, Apple’s much-awaited contribution to the electric car market has been teasing us from the horizon since rumours of its development first emerged back in late 2014.
Despite having the potential to be the California-based firm’s biggest project yet, both figuratively and literally, precious little has been officially revealed about the plans for the Apple Car.
Nevertheless, signs of development are abound, from the firm’s apparent ongoing tests of self-driving software around Cupertino via a fleet of sensor-laden Lexus SUVs to the filing of an assortment of suggestive patents.
Based on these, experts have anticipated what the Apple Car could look like and the revolutionary features it might sport, from a customisable touchscreen dashboard to a Siri-like ‘intelligent automated assistant’.
Brought to life by artists with the UK car leasing firm Vanarama, the gorgeous mock-up has the sleek, minimalist lines that make Apple’s tech offerings so distinctive, down to the glowing Apple logo on the radiator grille.
Like a heat mirage shimmering over the road ahead, Apple’s much-awaited contribution to the electric car market has been teasing us from the horizon since rumours of its development first emerged back in late 2014
As imagined by Vanarama’s artists, the sleek vehicle’s interior sports a sweeping, customisable, tactile touchscreen interface in place of a conventional dashboard
Pictured: a diagram from Apple’s patent for a reconfigurable in-vehicle instrument panel display. Unlike in Vanarama’s reconstruction, the one depicted in the patent only covers part of the dashboard
Vanarama experts have anticipated what the Apple Car could look like (pictured) and the features it might sport — from a customisable touchscreen dashboard to a Siri-like ‘intelligent automated assistant’ — based on real-life patent filings
‘Rumours of a car created by Apple started as early as 2014 and have gained momentum since,’ said Vanarama CEO Andy Alderson.
‘It has become a big deal in the car industry and beyond, and here at Vanarama we were eager to see what the Apple Car could look like.
‘To give us an idea, we searched for official patents filed by Apple itself and combined them with the design cues and aesthetics we’ve come to expect from the tech company. The result is our vision of the Apple car.
‘Although there is virtually no way of knowing what the finished product will look like, these patents are perhaps the best indication as to the direction Apple is taking.’
The stand-out patented concept that seems most likely to be realised in the Apple Car is a sleek touchscreen interface — one which Vanarama has imagined sweeping across the totality of the vehicle’s dashboard.
According to the patent, the interface will offer tactile feedback and will be both ‘stylistically attractive’ and fully ‘customizable by the user’.
The ‘Reconfigurable Tactile Control Display’, as Apple has called it, ‘is also thought to be lower in cost than most conventional instrument panels and may have applications in other fields such as military vehicles, control systems, home automation systems, CAD or Graphics terminals, and the like.’
To match Apple’s design sensibilities, the mock-up car imagines the display without any clear edges or boundaries, with Vanarama proposing that the dashboard might detect occupants’ phones or smartwatches to load custom interface layouts, suggest likely destinations via satnav-based maps and even pull up custom music playlists for the journey.
A number of other patents, meanwhile, hint at the potential for the Apple Car to have an unusual car body structure, with no central door pillars and rear coach doors — such as seen on some Lincoln Continentals and the modern Rolls-Royce Ghost — allowing for easier passenger entry via a ‘continuous opening’.
The vehicle’s forward seating, meanwhile, is imagined as being able to swivel fully round to face the passengers in the rear of the car, who in turn are separated by a sleek, table-like divider.
This internal flexibility could facilitate a more social travelling experience when the car is in self-driving mode, while still allowing the occupant of the driver’s seat to turn around and retake control when required.
Alongside the expectations of an autonomous mode for the Apple Car, another patent hints at a Siri-like ‘intelligent automated assistant’ that — alongside responding to direct commands and requests — would also be able to monitor the vehicle’s environment and either react or offer recommendations to the driver accordingly.
‘Rumours of a car created by Apple started as early as 2014 and have gained momentum since,’ said Vanarama CEO Andy Alderson. ‘It has become a big deal in the car industry and beyond, and here at Vanarama we were eager to see what the Apple Car could look like’
A number of patents unearthed by Vanarama hint at the potential for the Apple Car to have an unusual car body structure, with no central door pillars and rear coach doors (as pictured) — such as seen on some Lincoln Continentals and the modern Rolls-Royce Ghost — allowing for easier passenger entry via a ‘continuous opening’
Pictured: Apple patent US10309132B1 for a passenger vehicle body with a rear carriage door and no central door pillars
Pictured: Apple patent US10384519B1 for an adaptive door positioning system with a rear carriage door and no central pillars
The vehicle’s forward seating is imagined as able to swivel fully round to face the passengers in the rear of the car, who in turn are separated by a sleek, table-like divider. This flexibility could facilitate a more social travelling experience when the car is in self-driving mode, while still allowing the occupant of the driver’s seat to turn around and retake control when required
Vanarama designed the radiator grill on the front of its mock-up to mirror the ‘cheese grater’ ventilation holes on the case of the Mac Pro workstations and servers.
The centre of the grill, meanwhile, is bedecked with a backlit Apple logo — as long adorned the lids of many MacBook models — a motif replicated on the steering column, leather headrests, rear lights and wheel hubs.
Vanarama’s imagining of the Apple Car can be explored in 3D via a ‘virtual product reveal‘ on its website.
Vanarama’s artists designed the radiator grill on the front of the mock-up (left) to mirror the ‘cheese grater’ ventilation holes on the case of the Mac Pro workstations and servers (right)
Alongside the expectations of an autonomous mode for the Apple Car, another patent hints at a Siri-like ‘intelligent automated assistant’ that — alongside responding to direct commands and requests — would also be able to monitor the vehicle’s environment and either react or offer recommendations to the driver accordingly
‘We searched for official patents filed by Apple itself and combined them with the design cues and aesthetics we’ve come to expect from the tech company. The result is our vision of the Apple car,’ explained Mr Alderson
‘Although there is virtually no way of knowing what the finished [Apple Car] product will look like, these patents are perhaps the best indication as to the direction Apple is taking,’ Mr Alderson concluded