Audi’s Design Chief Is Officially Over the "iPad-on-the-Dashboard" Trend
In a world where car interiors are starting to look more like a Best Buy showroom than a cockpit, Audi’s Chief Designer, Massimo Frascella, is pushing back. In a recent sit-down with Top Gear, Frascella (who leads the classic Audi brand, not to be confused with the new, logo-less AUDI sub-brand in China) dropped some truth bombs that fly right in the face of current industry "vibes."
"True luxury is about the harmony between the digital and the physical. We’ve reached a point of 'tech fatigue' where more screens don't necessarily mean a better experience," says design consultant and GQ contributor Jonathan Bell on the shift toward tactile minimalism.
According to Frascella, cramming massive screens into every square inch of a car is often just "technology for technology’s sake." He argues that the physical connection to a vehicle is paramount. For Audi fans, that means the return of the "tactile click"—that satisfying, precision-engineered feedback from physical buttons and dials that has defined the brand’s premium interior feel for decades.
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When brands try to be "everything to everyone," Frascella warns, they inevitably lose their visual identity and soul. He’s not a fan of the "quick fix" either; trying to pivot a brand’s entire design language through a simple facelift is a losing game. Instead, he’s advocating for a "long-game" strategy that looks years into the future.
The core of the new Audi aesthetic? Visual simplicity and German precision. Frascella insists that we shouldn't sacrifice classic proportions just to shave a few points off an aerodynamic drag coefficient. In his view, a cohesive design is the "base" that everything else is built upon.
"The most sophisticated luxury today isn't found in a digital interface, but in the weight and resistance of a physical dial," notes an editorial in Vogue Business regarding the 'Quiet Luxury' movement in automotive design.
Perhaps most controversially in the EV era, Frascella believes an electric vehicle doesn't need to "look like an EV." If the tech dictates the design rather than serving the overall vision of luxury and performance, you've already lost the plot. It's a bold stance in an era of "Cyber-chic" aesthetics.
While current models like the new Audi A5 still lean heavily into the screen-centric trend, Frascella is plotting a course back to "traditional automotive values." He’s currently drawing inspiration from the brand’s greatest hits: the quirky Audi A2, the iconic first-gen TT, the sleek 1997 A6, and the legendary silver arrows of the Auto Union racing era.
The first glimpse of this "less is more" philosophy is the Concept C show car, which ditches the "main character energy" of giant monitors for a more integrated, sophisticated look. Meanwhile, rivals like Mercedes-Benz and BMW seem to be doubling down on the "Hyperscreen" lifestyle, tailoring their designs to global (specifically Chinese) tastes where maximalism is still the flex of choice. Audi, it seems, is betting that the American buyer is ready for a digital detox behind the wheel.
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