Ten teams of young international
designers battled it out to produce an innovative eco-friendly
popemobile that could guarantee high "pope visibility," meet strict
security standards and promise low emissions.
Some proposed features included sunroof panels that would open like
flower petals to side windows that could "live Tweet" messages to and
from the pope.
The winners, however, kept it simple.
Eric Leong, 24, of Toronto, and Han Yong-fei, 23, of France, modified a
hybrid Volkswagen Cross Coupe concept car into a white popemobile with
an expandable solar roof and bullet-proof wheels.
Their design also featured so-called "spray-on battery" technology in
which each element of a traditional lithium-ion battery is incorporated
into a liquid that can be sprayed, in layers, on many kinds of surfaces.
The spray-on technology provides "better efficiency" for rechargeable
batteries by reducing the car's weight, the designers said.
One eco-popemobile design finalist was a team of students from Turin's
European Institute of Design. They used a BMW ActiveHybrid X6 vehicle
and gave it a back roof made up of two dozen folding panels that could
open up like flower petals, allowing the pope to stand and greet the
faithful.
The car design also featured armored side windows that double as
monitors capable of displaying live, "selected Tweets for and from the
Holy Father," according to the young design makers.
The Italian car-parts manufacturer, Berman, sponsored the competition
near Mantua, Italy, Oct. 11-12 and invited select car design students
from around the world to submit their drawings.
It marked the first time the annual Autostyle Design Competition had a
special category for a popemobile, according to L'Osservatore Romano,
the Vatican newspaper.
A panel of judges, including design directors from Alfa Romeo, Audi,
Bentley, Fiat, Ford, Ferrari, Toyota and the University of Florence,
picked the winning designs "based on their consistency with (a major
carmaker's) brand, their originality and innovation, the
comprehensiveness and elegance of the work and the feasibility of the
projects," according to cardesignnews.com.
The popemobile designs had to use a production hybrid car model or
concept car design and keep the car model's front features so as to
maintain the brand image. Only the rear of the vehicle could be modified
and it had to be done in such a way that it guaranteed comfort for five
passengers and maximum "visibility of the Holy Father," it said.
Projects needed to use alternative energy, cutting-edge materials and
innovative technology that allowed for rapid and easy rear access to and
from the vehicle.
The Volkswagen Cross Coupe concept car uses two electric motors and a
next-generation turbo diesel engine, according to manufacturers.
The Vatican publishing house, LEV, will publish a volume of the competition's best "green" popemobile projects and designs.
Pope Benedict XVI has frequently spoken of the importance of protecting
the environment, and according to Vatican officials, is committed to
saving energy at the Vatican.
The Vatican has said its aim is to use renewable energy sources for 20
percent of its energy needs by 2020, the target date set by the European
Union for its members.