Wednesday, January 30, 2013

New Toyota Corolla Furia Concept Car 2014

Toyota discovered the Corolla Furia Concept at the 2013 North American International Auto Show in Detroit. This exhilarating compact sedan concept hints at the styling cues consumers can anticipate to see on the next-generation Corolla. The concept symbolizes an exterior styling study by Toyota designers, and it builds on the brand’s produce expansion priority to develop more dramatic, emotionally designed vehicles.

Toyota Corolla Furia Concept

“The Corolla Furia Concept is an untimely indicator of where our compacted car design may lead in the future,” said Bill Fay, group vice president and general manager of the Toyota Division. “It blends a sensitive emphasis on dramatic design and modern essentials of high technology to generate restrain appeals that will revelation a lot of people.”

Toyota Corolla Furia Concept


Toyota Corolla Furia Concept

The Furia is designed approximately a theme of “Iconic Dynamism,” which uses pure and simple exterior elements to create a confident, important and recognizable appearance attractive to more youthful clients. It features a more stimulating, dynamic explanation of a compact sedan that displays a more stable, athletic stance with 19-inch allow wheels pressed to the vehicle’s corners with short projection to help stress its long wheelbase.

Toyota Corolla Furia Concept


Toyota Corolla Furia Concept

The Corolla Furia design contain a swept windshield, with a sloped roofline and distinct fender flares, to help converse a sense of movement even when the car is stationary. The insistently styled front fascia, with a blacked-out grille treatment, helps highlight a pair of fashion front LED headlamps that merge with the rear complex LED taillight gathering to add a sense of advanced technology to the Furia’s impactful exterior. Carbon fiber inflection adorn the Corolla Furia Concept’s wheel wells, rocker panels, and rear valance, which contains ornate metal exhaust outlet surroundings to add a sense of modern athleticism.

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