T25 car developer turns to Autodesk for Formula One design

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New British Formula One engineering firm Gordon Murray Design says it’s getting “new levels of CAD and visualisation efficiency” with Autodesk’s digital prototyping solution.

The company went for Autodesk Showcase Professional, AliasStudio and Autodesk Maya for what looks set to become one of the most intriguing and talked-about road car projects of the next few years – its high-profile city car project. Globally renowned for his Formula One and road car design with McLaren, Murray was responsible for the design of the F1 Road Car and the Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren. His new company was launched in July alongside his plans for the radical fuel-efficient car – codenamed T25 – which he describes as, “a new class of vehicle. This will not be just another small big car; it’s just different.” Not only does the new firm plan to push the boundaries of road car design, it is also developing, “a design and prototyping process that brings CAD to a level of efficiency unprecedented in the automotive industry”. It says the Autodesk solution will enable the graphics section to produce concept sketches, 3D models and photo-realistic renderings. Showcase Professional, in particular, will provide an environment in which the team can present and review design options with high visual quality that accurately represent real-world materials, lighting and environments, and interact with these in real time. Murray says this will streamline the design review process and help decision making, ultimately aiding digital sign-off alongside physical prototypes. Although the concepts will be under wraps for much of the time, the tools will also be used for presentations to partners, industry, press and worldwide governments at strategic stages of the T25’s development. “Our investment in the Autodesk solution is totally in keeping with the ethos of the company – to radically raise the bar of design and to do so in the most efficient and effective way possible,” says Murray. “As part of this we recognise the key role digital visualisation plays in the creative process – and in communicating design intent and character.”