u/Odd_Employ816

Image 1 — Redesigning the interior of the Atlas Cross Sport 7-seater concept.
Image 2 — Redesigning the interior of the Atlas Cross Sport 7-seater concept.
Image 3 — Redesigning the interior of the Atlas Cross Sport 7-seater concept.
Image 4 — Redesigning the interior of the Atlas Cross Sport 7-seater concept.

Redesigning the interior of the Atlas Cross Sport 7-seater concept.

Tried giving the Atlas Cross Sport 7-seater a more premium, bold, spacious interior instead of the usual “basic family SUV” feel.

u/Odd_Employ816 — 7 days ago
▲ 21 r/whatifcars+2 crossposts

Do you remember this ugly-looking van by Toyota? Sienna redesigned- teens wouldn’t be ashamed to ride this to school now!

The old Toyota Sienna was practical… but visually, it had all the personality of a refrigerator.
So I redesigned it without removing the minivan DNA:
real sliding doors, real family practicality but with Escalade/Range Rover-level presence
My question is:
Why do family cars become ugly the moment they become practical?

u/Odd_Employ816 — 7 days ago

Tesla would dominate coupes if they stopped designing eggs

Uploading 3 versions of a Tesla coupe concept I made:
The base performance version in black
A fully-loaded luxury trim with maroon exterior, white Nappa leather interior, wooden accents, and hypercar-inspired detailing
A cinematic Banff Mountains driving collage showing how it would look on real roads
The idea was simple:
What if Tesla stopped making everything look like an aerodynamic jellybean and built a proper grand touring coupe inspired by cars like the Mercedes CLE 53 and BMW 430i?
Lower. Wider. More aggressive. Still futuristic — but actually emotional.

u/Odd_Employ816 — 8 days ago
▲ 4 r/chatgpt_promptDesign+2 crossposts

The Atlas Cross Sport should’ve been a 7-seater from day one

Made a concept of a stretched 7-seat Atlas Cross Sport while keeping the exact same coupe-style design and proportions.

Honestly… I think it looks WAY better than the real one.
Longer wheelbase makes it look more premium and planted instead of slightly stubby.

VW is missing a huge opportunity here.

u/Odd_Employ816 — 8 days ago