Volvo’s Russian Doll Styling Is Somehow Dodging Flak - For Now

Volvo is designing some striking cars right now, but in truth the newbies all share the same face... and other manufacturers have proved that it's a risky path to tread
Volvo’s Russian Doll Styling Is Somehow Dodging Flak - For Now

It’s hard when you’re called out on faults you hadn’t even realised you had. The other day Matt R and I were talking about car design when an uncomfortable truth came up. No, it wasn’t about our secret bromance, and it wasn’t even about my dubious taste in late-1990s dance music. It was that we’re both massive hypocrites and we didn’t even realise it until now.

Right here I can only speak for myself, and it’s time to make a confession. In the past I, like many other motoring hacks, have been vocal when it comes to car makers building a whole range of cars like Russian dolls; near-exact copies of one another but in sizes from tiny pupper to big dog. Audi and BMW have been there before, churning out products that, from most angles and at a glance, could be any one of three or four different cars.

Let's compromise and call it an XC75
Let's compromise and call it an XC75

It has always been a German trait. Porsche has a habit of building sports cars that look pretty similar from the front, but at least the Stuttgart brand’s excuse is that if they changed the face they copy and paste onto multiple models, they’d ruin it.

And yet this criticism of the likes of BMW has brought about two sets of consequences. Firstly, changes have been rung. New models from Munich are no longer identikit replicas of existing cars, but a size smaller or larger. In turn, that means some models are pretty and others are… well, a dog’s dinner.

Volvo’s Russian Doll Styling Is Somehow Dodging Flak - For Now

But closer to the heart of this confession is that we’re letting one manufacturer off. The public and media alike have given the Germans a kicking over the years for their lack of styling imagination, and yet we’ve not said a word about Volvo, which this week launched the new S60 (below), which looks like a shrunken S90. Then there’s the V60 which looks like a miniature V90 and the XC60… you can see where I’m going with this.

It was some years ago that the company management said to journalists that it wanted to create ‘iconic’ styling. Love it (like us) or loathe it, Volvo’s new era of penmanship sure is distinctive. Or, rather, it’s distinct from other brands. When it comes to distinguishing between in-house designs, especially from the front, it’s like playing spot the difference between the trimmed bushes either side of a stately home’s front door. There are differences, but you have to stare in order to see them.

Volvo’s Russian Doll Styling Is Somehow Dodging Flak - For Now

Why aren’t we moaning about this? Maybe it’s just that we’re so pleased that Volvo has finally struck the kind of long-deserved success it has craved for decades. Maybe it’s that, if we’re honest, the latest Volvos are some of the nicest and most effective everyday cars you can buy. That kind of showing earns goodwill among car journos.

Let’s not forget that all this blossoming good press is still nice and new. The Russian doll effect hasn’t yet had time to fog the glass of Volvo’s rapidly expanding trophy cabinet, but, if things carry on the way they are, it will. People get bored; the look becomes showroom white noise.

Volvo’s mission to create styling that becomes famous, if not iconic, seems to involve building an entire generation of new models with more or less exactly the same face. If it doesn’t shake things up in different directions when facelift time comes around, copy-and-paste will come back to bite the brand – just as it did for the Germans.

Comments

Diego Tului

hang on…. i know bmw has been one of the automakers that used the same design for all models but why never mention the worst offender at the moment: Mercedes! Take the C coupe and the S coupe, if you don’t see them side by side it’s difficult to tell the difference!

06/24/2018 - 11:20 |
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Anonymous

At least we all know that our tanks are now considered stylish.

06/24/2018 - 14:40 |
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Anonymous

I do like the design and dont mind the russian doll design as i see volvos so rarely

06/24/2018 - 17:40 |
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Anonymous

Ford had been doing this as well

06/24/2018 - 18:06 |
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Ilias J.

It’s more obvious for the interior, litteraly the same on

06/25/2018 - 06:48 |
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suchdoge

[DELETED]

06/25/2018 - 12:05 |
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^totally missed the point.

06/25/2018 - 18:29 |
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Anonymous

Chrysler did the same thing in the 80s with the K-Cars. The idea comes from having your lineup flow nicer. Think about the corporate grilles, design languages and other brand-specific traits. Mercedes is still doing it too. Most of Audi’s lineup is like that too. Volvo is just playing along.

06/25/2018 - 15:50 |
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Anonymous

Most car makers do this to some extent to have a certain “theme” to their cars, but some do take it way too far. For most Japanese cars I can tell right away what model they are with little room for error. At most I might get the wrong model when only one design is shared to such a close extent (like with the Corolla and Camry), but German automakers are being ridiculous with their similarities.

06/25/2018 - 16:11 |
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Klush

Well, they’ve replaced all their old ones and added a new one. Wonder how the next generation of Volvos will look like.

06/25/2018 - 18:41 |
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Nikoxio

I was really confused by the title, wouldn’t “matryoshka doll” have fit better?

08/12/2018 - 12:56 |
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