It wasn’t so long ago that Volvos were fairly nondescript family-focused machines, great at getting the job done but hardly objects of true desire. There were some handsome saloons, wagons and SUVs made, though nothing properly covetable. How things have changed; we can all debate when exactly that happened, but the important thing is that these days Volvo has one of the most suave line-ups around.
We’d say it began with the second XC90, introduced in 2014 and still stylishly soldiering on to this day; that was designed by Thomas Ingenlath, who it’s now been announced will return to Volvo as Chief Design Officer. Which should excite Volvo fans and, to be frank, those who just enjoy great-looking cars: as well as the XC90, the German was responsible for the smaller XC40, the fabulous-looking S90 and V90 duo, plus the VW XL1, original Skoda Yeti and first Skoda Superb in a previous life. While it was still part of Volvo, Polestar had Ingenlath pen the 1 and 2 also. In their own way, all are great bits of automotive design; he knows what he’s doing with the crayons, does Ingenlath, and obviously knows Volvo well also.
Truth be told he’s never been very far away; his most recent work was as a design advisor to Geely, which owns Volvo and part of Polestar, where he was CEO from 2017 to 2024. Ingenlath replaces Nicholas Gronenthal, who will now go on to be Volvo’s Head of Design Americas. He added: “I am delighted to be returning to Volvo Cars. Design is fundamental to what Volvo stands for. I look forward to working closely with the teams across the company, developing cars that are distinct, relevant and true to the Volvo brand.”
What exactly those will be obviously isn’t clear for the moment, though Volvo has pledged to be ‘net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2040.’ Which will obviously require a whole heap of new EVs, hopefully not all of them SUVs. Just imagine what a Polestar 1-style car could be with a pure electric powertrain. No doubt Ingenlath has some ideas of what’s to come, which we’ll be very keen to see. This is the man who made the Volvo estate sexy, after all - any design job after that will be a breeze…
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