The First Lotus Elite Design
Its design has been credited to Peter Kirwan-Taylor (1930-2014) (reference here), but some attribute major input to Ron Hickman (who also contributed to the Elan). The Revs Institute in Naples, Florida has a second-series 1962 Lotus in its collection and its Web page gives credit largely to Kirwan-Taylor while acknowledging contributions by Hickman.
Regardless of its styling pedigree, the original Elite was an outstanding design, as can be seen in the images below.
A 1959 Lotus Elite, Coys Auction photo.
Many Elites were painted cream color as in the first image. Buy here is a 1963 Lotus in not-quite British Racing Green: Hyman auctions photo.
This and the following images of a 1962 Lotus Elite are Bonhams auction photos. The design is simple, logical, and essentially ornamentation-free. By "logical," note the aft cut line of the door as it extends from the door sill up into the greenhouse in one straight line. The back window is large and curved, so there is no real need for quarter windows in the greenhouse. The car's rear is chopped, with some radius work to soften the transition.
In profile, the Elite has a classically long hood line, the driver's head being well aft of the car's center. The slope of the windshield is greater than seen on contemporary American cars. A subtle point has to do with the wheel openings. The forward opening is nearly round, but slightly flattened at the top -- this having to do with the shape of the fender relative to the fenderline profile. The rear opening is essentially squared-off. Were it shaped like the front opening, a visually "busy" zone would have been created due to the proximity with the windows and aft quarter pillar. Another subtlety is the slight rise in the fenderline above the rear axle that gives that line a whiff of variety.
Frontal view showing the curved, one-piece windshield. The grille opening is just that: an opening. Bumpers are flimsy and not well mated to the grille, perhaps the design's weakest point, albeit a trivial one.
Rear quarter view. Nothing to criticize here.
Comments
Post a Comment