GM designers’ personal collector cars hint at future classics

GM designers’ personal collector cars hint at future classicsGM designers’ personal collector cars hint at future classics Fullscreen

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Buy PhotoA little-known Oldsmobile Cutlass F-85 shows off its sharply creased sheet metal at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoA little-known Oldsmobile Cutlass F-85 shows off its sharply creased sheet metal at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoA little-known Oldsmobile Cutlass F-85 shows off its sharply creased sheet metal at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoA little-known Oldsmobile Cutlass F-85 shows off its sharply creased sheet metal at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoA little-known Oldsmobile Cutlass F-85 shows off its sharply creased sheet metal at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoA little-known Oldsmobile Cutlass F-85 shows off its sharply creased sheet metal at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoA rare Oldsmobile 442 at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy Photo1965 Chevy Impala at the General Motors Design staff car show near Woodward Avenue in Royal Oak.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy Photo1965 Chevy Impala and a 1970 Ford Mustang Mach One at the General Motors Design staff car show near Woodward Avenue in Royal Oak.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy Photo1970 Ford Mustang Mach One at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoThe profile and high roof of this classic Chevy station wagon hints at how designers can create unique looks and personalities for the next generation of car-SUV crossovers.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoThe profile and high roof of this classic Chevy station wagon hints at how designers can create unique looks and personalities for the next generation of car-SUV crossovers.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoThe profile and high roof of this classic Chevy station wagon hints at how designers can create unique looks and personalities for the next generation of car-SUV crossovers.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoCollectible and customized pickups are a growing trend at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoCollectible and customized pickups are a growing trend at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoCollectible and customized pickups are a growing trend at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoCollectible and customized pickups are a growing trend at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoCollectible and customized pickups are a growing trend at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoCollectible and customized pickups are a growing trend at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoCollectible and customized pickups are a growing trend at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoThe Dodge Neon SRT-4: An under-appreciated performance compact gets its due at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoThe Dodge Neon SRT-4: An under-appreciated performance compact gets its due at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoThe Dodge Neon SRT-4: An under-appreciated performance compact gets its due at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoA Cadillac CTS wagon at the General Motors Design staff car show near Woodward Avenue in Royal Oak.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoA Cadillac CTS wagon at the General Motors Design staff car show near Woodward Avenue in Royal Oak.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoFun and sporty SUVs are nothing new, as evidenced by the lifted open-topped Chevrolet K5 Blazer at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoFun and sporty SUVs are nothing new, as evidenced by the lifted open-topped Chevrolet K5 Blazer at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoFun and sporty SUVs are nothing new, as evidenced by the lifted open-topped Chevrolet K5 Blazer at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenBuy PhotoFun and sporty SUVs are nothing new, as evidenced by the lifted open-topped Chevrolet K5 Blazer at the General Motors Design staff car show during Dream Cruise week.Buy PhotoFullscreenReplay

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If you’d like to know what tomorrow’s classic cars will look like, you could do worse than to see the vehicles that today’s auto designers collect, rebuild and restore.

That’s part of the attraction of Design on Woodward, the annual car show featuring classics and performance cars owned by members of General Motors’s design staff.

Designers, model makers, sculptors and more parade their vehicles from Design HQ at the GM tech center in Warren to Memorial Park on the corner of Woodward Avenue and 13 Mile Road during Dream Cruise week each year.

  • Refreshingly, the show isn’t a GM-only affair. This year’s display included performance cars of all stripes, from a Dodge Neon SRT-4 to a $100,000-plus Audi R8.
  • Anybody who thinks the idea of high-roofed family vehicles like the Chevy Traverse and Ford Explorer are new might change their mind after walking around a spacious and ornate 1950s Chevrolet station wagon. The proportions of ‘50s classics may hold many clues to automakers’ design plans for the next generation of SUV-passenger car crossovers.
  • The best of frenemies, a 1965 Chevrolet Impala with a 283 V8, was parked next to a 1970 Ford Mustang Mach One next to Woodward, where the brands have competed for bragging rights for decades.
  • Pickups are a rising trend in car collecting, performance and customization. A blue-green 1970 Chevy pickup looked prehistoric compared to a modern Silverado. A lifted, chopped-top Blazer SUV proved the idea of fun, sporty SUVs is nothing new.

Contact Mark Phelan: mmphelan@freepress.com or 313-222-6731. Follow him on Twitter @mark_phelan.

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