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Ford 021C
Concept car
Concept car
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| image | 1999 Ford 021C Petersen Automotive Museum.jpg |
| name | Ford 021C |
| caption | Ford 021C in green at the Petersen Automotive Museum |
| assembly | Ghia |
| designer | Marc Newson, Laurens van den Acker |
| class | Concept city car (A-seg) |
| production | 1999 (concept) |
| body_style | 4-door sedan |
| layout | FF |
| engine | 1.6 L Zetec-SE |
| transmission | 4 speed automatic |
| wheelbase | 2485 mm |
| length | 3601 mm |
| width | 1648 mm |
| height | 1430 mm |
| weight |
The Ford 021C is a concept car first shown to the public at the October 1999 Tokyo Motor Show by Ford. It was designed by Marc Newson and built by Carrozzeria Ghia in Turin, Italy. The car's name is taken from the Pantone orange colour, said to be Newson's favorite, although it was repainted in lime green when it was brought to the Milan Furniture Fair in April 2000. Ford officials stated that 021C also stands for "21st Century." Although it was produced purely as a styling exercise and was not intended for production, the 021C has been called "one of the great 'what-ifs' of recent car design history."
Design
The design was commissioned by Ford's design director J Mays, who selected Newson after seeing his Lockheed lounge chair in a Madonna video for the song "Rain." The result was a four-door saloon in what Newson termed a "retro-futurist" theme, similar to the predictions made of Year 2000 automobiles in the 1960s.
The exterior and interior shapes echoed prior Newson designs for round-cornered rectangular dish racks, furniture and spoke-and-hub lamps. The concept also incorporated many innovations in the interior such as four seats, with the front two seats swiveling on pedestals;
Exterior features included a slide-out boot, suicide doors and LED lamps front and rear. The car was painted green after its unveiling in Tokyo and, unusually for an old prototype, has continued to be shown again at various art exhibits.
Specifications
The 021C is powered by a 1.6 L Zetec engine producing 100 PS driving the front wheels through a four-speed automatic transmission. The 16" alloy wheels were fitted with bespoke graphite coloured Pirelli tyres. and was designed with minimal surface ornamentation.
The car was 3601 mm long, 1648 mm wide and sat on a wheelbase of 2485 mm. It is 19 mm shorter than the contemporary first-generation Ford Ka city car.
Reception

After its 1999 unveiling at the Tokyo Auto Show, automotive critics generally panned the design, with one self-deprecatingly calling himself "old and out of touch" and thus unable to appreciate what was perceived as a toy-like, naïve box. Others noted the sharp divide in opinions between "traditional" automotive styling critics and design professionals, who hailed the unified concepts in the design. Jonathan Glancey, writing for The Guardian, said at the time that most "contemporary car design is about as interesting as watching magnolia paint dry" and called the 021C "an eye-catcher", noting that "[it made] everyone who saw it smile."
In 2009, ten years after it was first unveiled, critics revisited the design of the 021C and found the design had aged well, still appearing sleek and modern. Alex Kierstein, writing for Automobile in 2020, noted influences from the original iMac G3 and called it "ahead of its time ... had Newson penned the Ford 021C today, maybe it could have been recast as a small production EV", comparing it to contemporary small EVs such as the Fiat New 500 and Honda e.
In popular media
A car similar to the Ford 021C received a parking citation from newly minted officer Judy Hopps in the movie Zootopia. J Mays is credited as the chief car designer for the film.
Exhibited
- Tokyo Motor Show, October 1999
- North American International Auto Show, January 2000
- Milan Furniture Fair, April 2000
- Design Museum London, May–July 2001
- Gagosian Gallery New York, September–October 2010
- Philadelphia Museum of Art, Nov 2013 – Apr 2014
References
References
- Newson, Marc. (2012). "Marc Newson : works". Taschen.
- Roux, Caroline. (17 November 2001). "Master of his universe". The Guardian.
- Espinosa, Cathryn. (24 May 2001). "Inside job: Ford 021C". The Telegraph.
- (11 April 2000). "Ford 021C by Marc Newson at Milan Furniture Fair: The interplay of design, fashion & stylish mobility". Ford Motor Company.
- . (20 October 1999). ["1999 Tokyo Motor Show, Part III"](http://www.thecarconnection.com/news/1001617_1999-tokyo-motor-show-part-iii).
- King, Toby. (October 2007). "The best cars they never made".
- Booth, Michael. (2025-04-07). "A round-up of eight architects' vision for automobiles".
- (20 October 1999). "Reaching out for a new generation of consumers". Ford Motor Company.
- L., Skott. (26 September 2009). "Ford 021C by Marc Newson".
- Patton, Phil. (28 October 1999). "CURRENTS: CAR DESIGN; Wheels for 2000: The Details Count". The New York Times.
- Thompson, Henrietta. (28 April 2015). "Newson's Lockheed Lounge breaks world auction records". The Telegraph.
- Gewertz, Ken. (2002-02-28). "Driven by design: J Mays brings the romance of the road back to auto design".
- . (1998). ["Dish Doctor: Marc Newson, 1998"](http://www.magisdesign.com/elenco_prodotti/dish-doctor/).
- (1992). "Wooden Chair".
- . (November 2006). ["Marc Newson"](http://design.designmuseum.org/design/marc-newson.html).
- Patton, Phil. (2010-09-29). "Ford 021C Concept by Marc Newson Reappears at Gagosian Gallery". New York Times.
- "Ford 021C Concept".
- . (20 October 1999). ["Design and Technology Meet in the Ford O21C"](http://media.ford.com/article_display.cfm?article_id=3072). *Ford Motor Company*.
- Davis, Tony. (28 October 1999). "Ford goes back – or ahead – to the retro-future".
- (2010). "How to Design Cars Like a Pro". Motorbooks.
- Glancey, Jonathan. (November 1, 1999). "Shrink and drive". The Guardian.
- (2013-04-11). "The small car as an object of desire". Financial Times.
- Kierstein, Alex. (December 2, 2020). "The 1999 Ford 021C Concept: Born Too Soon?".
- Noe, Rain. (16 November 2023). "Marc Newson's 021C Ford Concept Car has Aged Extremely Well".
- . (2016). ["1999 Ford 021C"](http://www.imcdb.org/vehicle_898330-Ford-021C-1999.html).
- Kiley, David. (21 March 2016). "The Cars Of 'Zootopia' Come From One Of The Auto Industry's Best Minds".
- Shayotovich, Eli. (2023-01-20). "This Ford Concept Car Made A Surprising Movie Cameo More Than 15 Years After {{as written".
- "The Ford 021C concept car designed by Marc Newson".
- Hales, Linda. (January 8, 2000). "Design". The Washington Post.
- (September–October 2010). "Marc Newson: Transport". Gagosian Gallery.
- . (November 2013). ["Marc Newson: At Home"](http://www.philamuseum.org/exhibitions/794.html). *Philadelphia Museum of Art*.
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