
The configuration of a car body is typically determined by the layout of the engine, passenger and luggage compartments, which can be shared or separately articulated. A key design feature is the car's roof-supporting
pillar
A column or pillar in architecture and structural engineering is a structural element that transmits, through compression (physical), compression, the weight of the structure above to other structural elements below. In other words, a column i ...
s, designated from front to rear of the car as A-
pillar
A column or pillar in architecture and structural engineering is a structural element that transmits, through compression (physical), compression, the weight of the structure above to other structural elements below. In other words, a column i ...
, B-pillar, C-pillar and D-pillar.
Common car body configurations are one-box (e.g., a van, minivan, MPV), two-box (e.g., a hatchback) and three-box (e.g., a sedan/saloon) designs.
One-box design

A one-box design, also called a ''monospace'', ''mono-box'' or ''monovolume'' configuration
—approximates in shape a single volume comprising engine, cabin and cargo areas, in part by locating the base of a vehicle's
A-pillars further forward.
One-box designs include
light commercial vehicle
A light commercial vehicle (LCV) in the European Union, Australia and New Zealand is a commercial carrier vehicle with a gross vehicle weight of no more than 3.5 metric tons (tonnes). The LCV designation is also occasionally used in both Canad ...
s,
minivans
Minivan (sometimes called simply as van) is a North American car classification for vehicles designed to transport passengers in the rear seating row(s), with reconfigurable seats in two or three rows. The equivalent classification in Europe is ...
, MPVs and
mini MPV
Mini MPV— an abbreviation for mini multi-purpose vehicle— is a vehicle size class for the smallest size of minivans/MPVs. The mini MPV size class sits below the compact MPV size class and the vehicles are often built on the platforms of B-se ...
s. Passenger cars with a one-box design include the 1984
Renault Espace, 1992
Renault Twingo I, 2008
Tata Nano, 2005
Toyota Aygo/
Citroën C1/
Peugeot 107 and 1997
Mercedes-Benz A-Class.
Two-box design
''Two-box'' designs articulate a volume for engine and a volume that combines passenger and cargo volumes, e.g.,
station wagon/estate or (three or five-door)
hatchback
A hatchback is a car body configuration with a rear door that swings upward to provide access to a cargo area. Hatchbacks may feature fold-down second row seating, where the interior can be reconfigured to prioritize passenger or cargo volume. ...
s like the
Saab 900, and minivans like the
Chrysler minivan, 2001
Volkswagen Polo Mk4
The Volkswagen Polo Mk4 is the fourth generation of the Volkswagen Polo supermini car produced by the German manufacturer Volkswagen. It was marketed from early 2002 to 2009 in most countries except Argentina and the USA. It was manufactured in S ...
and 1999
Skoda Fabia Mk1.
Three-box design
Three-box design is a broad automotive styling term describing a
coupé
A coupe or coupé (, ) is a passenger car with a sloping or truncated rear roofline and two doors.
The term ''coupé'' was first applied to horse-drawn carriages for two passengers without rear-facing seats. It comes from the French past parti ...
,
sedan/saloon,
notchback
A notchback is a design of a car with the rearmost section that is distinct from the passenger compartment and where the back of the passenger compartment is at an angle to the top of what is typically the rear baggage compartment. Notchback cars ...
or
hatchback
A hatchback is a car body configuration with a rear door that swings upward to provide access to a cargo area. Hatchbacks may feature fold-down second row seating, where the interior can be reconfigured to prioritize passenger or cargo volume. ...
where—when viewed in profile—principal volumes are articulated into three separate compartments or boxes: engine, passenger and cargo.
Three-box designs are highly variable.
Hemmings Motor News said:
Where the
Renault Dauphine is a three-box that carries its engine in the rear and its cargo up front, the styling of the
Å koda Octavia integrates a
hatchback
A hatchback is a car body configuration with a rear door that swings upward to provide access to a cargo area. Hatchbacks may feature fold-down second row seating, where the interior can be reconfigured to prioritize passenger or cargo volume. ...
with the articulation of a three-box. This style was later used by its larger
Å koda Superb, which marketed as the TwinDoor, within the liftgate operable as a trunk lid or as a full hatchback. As with the third generation European
Ford Escort (also a hatchback), the third box may be vestigial. And three-box styling does not need to be boxy:
Car Design News
''Car Design News'' (''CDN'') () is an online news and information service for the international automotive design community. ''CDN'' covers production and concept cars, the career moves of significant car designers, major international auto sho ...
calls the fluid and rounded
Fiat Linea a three-box design
—and most examples of the markedly bulbous styling of the
ponton genre are three-box designs.
In 2012,
Hemmings Motor News wrote "the three-box sedan design is seen as traditional or—worse—conventional."
By 2016 In the United States, the three-box sedan began to wane in popularity.
In 2018, the Wall Street Journal wrote: "from gangster getaway cars and the Batmobile to the humble family sedan, the basic three-box configuration of a passenger car—low engine compartment, higher cabin, low trunk in the rear—has endured for decades as the standard shape of the automobile. Until now."
Sales and popularity of 4-door notchback sedans/saloons began declining in Europe since mid-1990s, especially affordable ones. This is resulted in moving production of Volkswagen Jetta in Mexico, as well as the Peugeot abandoning that segment since 2001 when the production of
Peugeot 306 ended. Other, predominantly European manufacturers followed suit, with the most recent generation of Opel Astra may no longer to be offered as the 4-door notchback. Since 2018, Ford reduced sales of 4-door
Focus as well as
Mondeo to Eastern Balkans markets. Again, Volkswagen stopped sales of
Jetta in Europe around the same time due to too long dimensions, exceeding those with International
Passat B8.
Car roof classification
A related classification is based on the style of roof in the car design. The DrivAer aerodynamics model of the Technical University of Munich classifies roof styles as (F)
Fastback
A fastback is an automotive styling feature, defined by the rear of the car having a single slope from the roof to the tail. The kammback is a type of fastback style.
Some models, such as the Ford Mustang, have been specifically marketed as ...
, (E)
Estate Back, (N)
Notchback
A notchback is a design of a car with the rearmost section that is distinct from the passenger compartment and where the back of the passenger compartment is at an angle to the top of what is typically the rear baggage compartment. Notchback cars ...
/
Sedan.
See also
*
Ponton styling
*
Coke bottle styling
*
Glossary of automotive design
References
{{reflist
Car body styles