Michelin has recognised people who addressed mobility solutions that mega-cities might face in the year 2035, as part of the 2019 Michelin Challenge Design competition.
Works by individuals and teams of designers from China, Colombia, Germany, India, Italy, South Korea, the United Kingdom and the United States were among the winners and finalists selected by a jury of automotive designers and industry experts.
This year’s theme, “Inspiring Mobility,” challenged the participants to design a mobility solution that will evoke a personal connection around joy, trust, security or freedom for users in Berlin, Mumbai, New York, São Paulo or Shanghai in 2035.
Winners include:
- First place: Jintae Tak, Minseok Choi, Doohee Lee and Joonyong Lee of Seoul, South Korea, for design entry “Depot;”
- Second place: Robert Crick of London, United Kingdom, for design entry “Renault Fold;”
- Third place: Junghyun Kim and Hanum Jeong of Seoul, South Korea, for design entry “Volvo Intersection.”
The three winning designs and 12 finalists were chosen by the jury from more than 1,500 entrants representing 71 countries. In the past 19 years, Michelin Challenge Design has received more than 14,000 entries from 134 countries.
Representatives from the first-, second- and third-place winners are invited as guests at the “Movin’On Summit,” event held in Montreal. The winners and their designs will be recognized during a private reception and awards ceremony at Movin’On.
Finalists (in alphabetical order) are:
- Jung-Taek Cho of Gyeonggi-do, South Korea, for design entry “Starbucks Square;”
- Mohammed Fahd of Calicut, India, for design entry “SIEMENS Air Rescue Vehicle;”
- Komal G. and Amogh Barakol of Bangalore, India; and Cuili Yan of Sichuan, China, for design entry “AirSP;”
- Siavash Jafari Jozani of Novato, California, United States, for design entry “WAYMO-FLOW;”
- Simon Kafmann of Caldaro, Italy, for design entry “Escape.”
- Moritz Kirschhoff of Hannover, Germany, for design entry “Urban Islands;”
- Miguel Angel Garcia Londono of Medellin, Colombia, for design entry “NIO EXT Extended Mobility;”
- Oliver May of Duesseldorf, Germany, for design entry “Lynx;”
- Jay Morris of Yateley, Hampshire, United Kingdom, for design entry “NYC Ease;”
- Hyojun Shin, Seonghwan Hong and Hyungtaek Lee of Seoul, South Korea, for design entry “Mercedes Benz 800 Pullman;”
- Aditya Arun Surti of Pune, Maharashtra, India, for design entry “Renault TRIO;”
- Sebastian Weigand of Gemünden am Main, Germany, for design entry “Volkswagen CIT.E.”
In addition, the jury and program managers have created a new recognition for design sketch. This year, Alberic Chevallier of Nantes, France, was chosen for the design entry “Breathe.”
Images of the winning entries are available at www.michelinchallengedesign.com.
The Michelin Challenge Design jury includes:
- Stewart Reed, chair, Transportation Design Department, Art Center College of Design, consultant and jury chairman, Michelin Challenge Design
- Chris Chapman, chief designer, Hyundai Design North America
- Dave Marek, Acura global creative director, Honda R&D Americas, Inc.
- Craig Metros, design director, North American Truck, S.U.V. & Commercial, Ford Motor Company
- Damien Michelin, honorary juror, Michelin North America
- Louise Pelletier, director, Centre de Design, UQAM
- Richard Plavetich, general manager, design business, Nissan Design America
- Thomas Sycha, design manager, BMW Group Design, Europe
- Freeman Thomas, former global advanced design director, Ford Motor Company
Caption: Left to Right: 3rd place winner Xun Zou (Max), 2nd place winner Olivera Cesar, 1st place winner Jiayi Sun with Ben Ebel, chairman of Michelin Challenge Design