The Fiat Trepiùno is a
transverse front-engine, front-wheel drive, four-passenger
concept
Concepts are defined as abstract ideas. They are understood to be the fundamental building blocks of the concept behind principles, thoughts and beliefs.
They play an important role in all aspects of cognition. As such, concepts are studied by s ...
city car
The A-segment is the 1st category in the passenger car classification system defined by the European Commission. It is used for city cars, the smallest category of passenger cars defined.
A-segment sales represent approx. 7-8% of the market in ...
introduced by
Fiat
Fiat Automobiles S.p.A. (, , ; originally FIAT, it, Fabbrica Italiana Automobili di Torino, lit=Italian Automobiles Factory of Turin) is an Italian automobile manufacturer, formerly part of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, and since 2021 a subsidiary ...
at the 2004
Geneva Salon international de l'auto; styled at the Centro Stile Fiat; powered by a 54 hp 1100cc engine
and built by the
Turin
Turin ( , Piedmontese: ; it, Torino ) is a city and an important business and cultural centre in Northern Italy. It is the capital city of Piedmont and of the Metropolitan City of Turin, and was the first Italian capital from 1861 to 1865. Th ...
-based company,
I.DE.A.
Designed by
Roberto Giolito,
the Trepiùno is noted for its reconfigurable interior
which can accommodate four passengers in a 3+1 configuration, i.e., three adults and one occasional passenger. The name ''Trepiùno'' translates from Italian as "three plus one."
Presented at the Geneva Motor Show under the theme "Return to the Future,"
the Trepiùno's styling recalled Fiat's original
Fiat 500
The Fiat 500 ( it, Cinquecento, ) is a rear-engined, four-seat, small city car that was manufactured and marketed by Fiat Automobiles from 1957 until 1975 over a single generation in two-door saloon and two-door station wagon bodystyles.
La ...
, introduced for model year 1957
and widely called the ''Bambino''
— a model that was designed by noted Fiat engineer
Dante Giacosa
Dante Giacosa (3 January 1905 - 31 March 1996) was an Italian automobile designer and engineer responsible for a range of Italian automobile designs — and for refining the front-wheel drive layout to an industry-standard configuration.
Fron ...
and went on to sell more than four million examples over a production run of 18 years.
The Trepiùno also uses Giacosa's breakthrough
transverse front-wheel drive layout — which ultimately became an industry standard,
the front-wheel drive layout "adopted by virtually every other manufacturer in the world."
The 2004 concept Trepiùno inspired a subsequent production four-seater hatchback and cabriolet, the
6th-generation 500 & 500C (2007),
designed under the direction of
Frank Stephenson
Frank Stephenson (; born 3 October 1959) is a Moroccan-born American automobile designer who has worked for Ford, BMW, Mini, Ferrari, Maserati, Fiat, Lancia, Alfa Romeo, and McLaren.
Motor Trend magazine has called him "one of the most i ...
at Centro Stile Fiat.
The 500 would go on to be marketed in more than 100 countries worldwide and win more than 40 awards, including the
CAR Magazine Car of the Year (2007)
[ ] and the 2008
European Car of the Year
The European Car of the Year ("ECOTY") award is an international Car of the Year award established in 1964, by a collective of automobile magazines from different countries in Europe. The current organising companies of the award are '' Auto'' ( ...
. It is still in production more than a decade after its launch.
Origins
Stung by the tremendous success of the
Smart Fortwo, especially in Italy,
Fiat began examining a variety of small car concepts "to regain its small-car crown,"
— developing an "intense interest in producing a Smart (Fortwo) competitor"
— and concluding that "most customers want more than just the Smart’s two seats."
Roberto Giolito said "many owners of vehicles such as the two-seater Smart would prefer added seating flexibility and that desire has prompted the option of a third seat in the Fiat Trepiuno concept,"
adding: "three seats is a good number for the city car", where the Smart (Fortwo) could be restrictive. The Fiat philosophy there is the trend to create something more useful for daily problems."
Design
;Seating concept
Consistent with its ''3+1'' name, the Trepiùno's packaging concept combines an overall short length with high
h-point seating — and a seating configuration where the front passenger can slide forward toward a reconfigurable dashboard with an inward-folding ''collapsable'' glovebox
— thus enabling sufficient room for one full-size rear passenger along with a fourth, strictly occasional, "emergency" child seat behind the driver — or enabling a pure 3-seat or 2-seat vehicle by folding one or both rear seats.
The 3+1 capability allowed the Trepiùno to "transcend the classic ''2+2'' arrangements of certain coupés or open-topped sports cars and also the configurations of many city cars that limit passenger room to just two seats in the front."
Fiat would later adopt a production version of the Trepiùno, but not as a 3+1 — a seating arrangement that did appear in the
Opel Trixx
The Opel Trixx (stylised as TRIXX) is a concept city car created by German car manufacturer Opel. It was unveiled at the 2004 Geneva Motor Show.
The brief was set out by Opel CEO Carl-Peter Forster to the Opel and Saab design studios, and w ...
(2004) concept car and in the production 2008
Toyota iQ city car, four years after the Trepiùno's debut.
Fiat worked with engineers at
Johnson Controls
Johnson Controls International is an American
Irish-domiciled multinational conglomerate headquartered in Cork, Ireland, that produces fire, HVAC, and security equipment for buildings. As of mid-2019, it employed 105,000 people in around 2,0 ...
to develop the Trepiùno seating package, minimizing seat thickness and using a sandwich of soft polyurethane over a thin and rigid polyurethane frame.
Rear seat backrests could fold inward and upward, extending the concealed load compartment.
;Design details
The Trepiùno's dashboard features two storage drawers; interior lighting using light-emitting diodes to illuminate the cabin at night; and tail-lights that communicate with the dashboard TFT/LCD screen.
Foreshadowing the
500C (Cabriolet) model of the subsequent production model and recalling the 1957 500's folding canvas sunroof
the Trepiùno features a fixed polycarbonate roof, marketed as a ''Skydome''. Head restraints featured a distinctive circular shape and were carried forward to the production Fiat 500.
A two-part tailgate (a la Smart Fortwo) featured lower half-gate designed to support loading, along with an upper half-gate including the rear window and an upper spoiler.
In updating the styling of the 1957 500, Roberto Giolito said “the important thing is what you leave out. We left out the double bubble”
— the two curved forms of original. These shapes served a structural purpose on the original, strengthening the bodywork. Given that the Trepiùno had a different layout (front vs. rear engine) and bodywork, the structural shapes were unnecessary. According to Giolito, "the reason the original 500 worked, he said, was that its designer,
Dante Giacosa
Dante Giacosa (3 January 1905 - 31 March 1996) was an Italian automobile designer and engineer responsible for a range of Italian automobile designs — and for refining the front-wheel drive layout to an industry-standard configuration.
Fron ...
, was an engineer who understood structure."
In addition to I.D.E.A. Institute and Johnson Controls, Fiat engineers worked with
Bosch
Bosch may refer to:
People
* Bosch (surname)
* Hieronymus Bosch (c. 1450 – 1516), painter
* Van den Bosch, a Dutch toponymic surname
* Carl Bosch, a German chemical engineer and nephew of Robert Bosch
* Robert Bosch, founder of Robert Bosch Gm ...
,
Ficosa,
Hitachi
() is a Japanese multinational corporation, multinational Conglomerate (company), conglomerate corporation headquartered in Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan. It is the parent company of the Hitachi Group (''Hitachi Gurūpu'') and had formed part of the Ni ...
, IXFIN SpA,
Magneti Marelli
Magneti Marelli S.p.A. () is an Italian developer and manufacturer of components for the automotive industry. The firm is headquartered in Corbetta, Italy, and includes 86 manufacturing plants, 12 R&D centres, and 26 application centers in 19 c ...
,
Pirelli
Pirelli & C. S.p.A. is a multinational tyre manufacturer based in Milan, Italy. The company, which has been listed on the Milan Stock Exchange since 1922, is the 6th-largest tyre manufacturer and is focused on the consumer production of tyres ...
,
Rieter
Rieter is a producer of textile machinery based in Winterthur, Switzerland.
History
Founded in 1795 by Johann Jacob Rieter (1762–1826), the company initially produced textile products. In 1806, as Napoleon imposed the Continental Blockade t ...
and
Toora to develop the Trepiùno concept.
;Infotainment control system
The Trepiùno's instrument panel features an innovative integral control and infotainment system, developed by Johnson Controls over a period of two years — presaging such systems as Ford's
Sync,
Kia Uvo and Fiat's own
Blue&Me. The Trepiùno system, marketed as ''MultiController'', features a flush-mounted function control system with an instrument panel mounted display as well as a deployable/retractable
TFT/LCD panel. Commands for climate control, fog lights or entertainment are accessed by the deployed TFT/LCD or by tapping the dashboard's pressure-sensitive translucent silicone membrane, marketed as ''ElekTex''. The concept eliminated buttons and switches;
could luminously "trace" user inputs;
and was augmented by a touch-sensitive multi-function controller located between the front seats.
See also
*
Smart Fortwo
*
Toyota iQ
*
Ford Sync
*
Blue&Me
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trepiuno
Fiat concept vehicles