Porsche - a brief history
Ferdinand Porsche played an important role
in the development of airplanes and racing cars, and the
construction of tanks for the Wehrmacht. He is an automobile
engineer with more than a thousand patents to his name. He was
appointed chief engineer at Mercedes-Benz in Stuttgart in the
1920s. Later on, he set up his own engineering workshop and
designed among others the Volkswagen. At the plant where
Volkswagen was made, Wolfsburg, he was chief of operations and
at the end of the war he was interned by the Allies.
He was released a few
years later and started building his first car with his
son, Ferry Porsche. The car was named the Porsche 356 and
it was a sports car and a reminiscent of the Volkswagen.
It had the same four-cylinder boxer engine that was
rear-mounted, just like the VW. It was far from being a
powerful sports car, developing only 40 bhp and a maximum
speed of 87 mph (140 km/h). First produced as a
convertible and later as a hard top it distinguished by
the very elegant and innovative body. It was developed in
the workshop of Erwin Komenda, a master of restrained
streamlining who had been in charge of sheet metal and
design techniques at Porsche since the VW Beetle.
The new style of closed coupe was designed by Komenda and
it soon became the embodiment of the sports car, thanks to
its fastback.
This tradition was continued by Komenda and
Ferdinand “Butzi” Porsche, the founder’s grandson, with the
911.
The 911 became easily recognizable: it had
attractive sloping bonnet and what later became characteristic
“frog eye” headlights, curves running from the top edge of the
windscreen to the rear bumper and a straight waistline. From a
functional and technical point of view it was more like BMW
1500, although it retained the stylistic features of the
original Porsche. The new 911 will become the foundation stone
of Porsche’s identity, even though the design was not always
appreciated. During the 1970`s and 1980`s, the designers
attempts to distance Porsche from its legendary design brought
the company to the edge of disaster. The more modern 924 model,
“a people’s Porsche”, developed with Volkswagen, as well as the
928 were far from fulfilling the expectations.
In the 1990`s, the
company realized that what for over twenty years was
perceived as a straitjacket, it was in fact a market
advantage. During the 1990`s, Porsche became highly
profitable since they now knew that the typical Porsche
features were timeless. Nearly forty people now worked in
the design department on further developments of the
long-running 911. These developments included the 911 GTI,
a powerful combination of sports and racing car, put
forward by the in-house designer Anthony R. Hatter. In
1999, chief designer proudly presented the new Boxster
which enabled Porshe to establish a second independent
range of models.
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