Big auto shows like last month’s NAIAS are an excuse for dozens of car manufacturers to all gather under one roof and show off upcoming models, technology, concepts and future plans. It’s also one of the few times throughout the year you’ll get rival names like Ford and Chevy to amicably park their latest and greatest in adjacent square footage. Take a longer look around the show floor and key themes begin to crop up – design details, technologies and vehicle types begin to reveal themselves more as industry trends than unique news from an individual marque.
Trends and technology naturally become obsolete over time. That’s why we don’t see big taillight fins or jet-age styling anymore; instead, we have homogenous CUVs and cars nearly drive themselves. It’s all a matter of fashion and engineering capability. These are the design, technology and style trends we hope to see more of in 2019.
More Factory-Built Overlanders
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Jeep has been in on the adventure lifestyle game for years now, offering whole catalogs full of factory add-ons, particularly to make their iconic Wrangler 4×4 even more capable off-road and custom-fit to individual owners’ tastes. Considering how much interest has poured into overlanding in the past few years, it makes sense that other manufacturers are starting to follow suit.
Ford, of course, is introducing the new Bronco later this year, but the Ranger pickup is the Blue Oval’s first modern attempt at building a truck purely for recreational entertainment. It only takes one look at the Ranger’s options list – which includes 30-plus Yakima products like roof racks, roof top tents and bike racks – to realize where Ford is aiming its new mid-sized pickup. Chevy has the Colorado Bison AEV edition, Jeep is doubling down with the Gladiator and Toyota recently revamped the TRD line.
At this point, if a manufacturer is still only considering an overlanding-focused version of its SUV or pickup or just testing the waters with concepts like the Kia Telluride, they’re only delaying the inevitable. If those marques wait any longer, they risk getting left behind — which is why 2019 will be more likely than not see an explosion of adventure vehicles straight from the factory.