Sunday, June 13, 2021

Stealing from Carol's blog today

Carol had lots of interesting comments and photos on this blog post but I love this car. It's just so cool. 

We have picked up goodies at Figaros's on 10th in the past. I'm glad to see it is open

-Photo by John Denniston

 A row of Nissan Figaros, a Japanese right-hand-drive vehicle, is a common sight outside this particular house in Dunbar. They're used in the owner's restaurant business, according to one chat we had with him. The shape and colours of the cars turn them into a kind of street-side ornament. 

From Wiki:

The Nissan Figaro is a front-enginefront-wheel drive, two-door, 2+2fixed-profile convertible manufactured by Nissan for model year 1991, and marketed in Japan at Nissan Cherry Stores.

A total of 20,073 Figaros were produced by Nissan in the convertible's single year of series production[1] — all with right hand drive.[2]

As a fixed-profile convertible, the upper side elements of the Figaro's bodywork remain fixed, while its fabric soft top retracts in conjunction with a solid panel with a defroster-equipped glass rear window — as seen in other notable fixed-profile convertibles, including the Vespa 400 (1957), Citroën 2CV (1948–1990), the Nash Rambler Convertible "Landau" Coupe (1950), and the 1957 Fiat 500 — as well its 2007 Fiat 500 successor.

With its design variously attributed to Naoki Sakai[3] and/or Shoji Takahashi,[4] the design vaguely recalls the Gutbrod Superior, a mediocre German fixed-profile convertible marketed from 1950-1954.[5][6]

Because of its origins at Pike Factory, Nissan's special project group, the Figaro (along with the Nissan PaoBe-1and S-Cargo) are known as Nissan's "Pike cars," and represented a design strategy that adapted "design and marketing strategies from other industries like personal electronics."[4]

In 2011, noted design critic Phil Patton, writing for the New York Times, called the Pike cars "the height of postmodernism"[4] and "unabashedly retro.