GM Designer Talks the Future of GMC, Defends Touch-Sensitive Controls
By Kelsey Mays
March 5, 2015
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Parent company GM has said for decades it wants to move beyond badge engineering — slotting the same car with minimal changes into its various brands — and the Acadia shows promise.
The Acadia rides the same platform as the Chevrolet Traverse and Buick Enclave, and up through the 2012 model, overall quality has mirrored the Traverse. It begs the question: Why not buy the better-equipped Chevrolet for the same price? But that has changed.
Dave Lyon, GM’s global director of executive design, calls the Acadia “a great indication” for what’s to come at GMC. Lyon, who hails from the Chicago suburbs, spoke with Cars.com last week at the Chicago Auto Show.
“We will move cabins more upscale, we will use more premium materials,” he says of GMC. “There really is a very unique position out there for GMC, where it has a very serious, real, authentic truck credibility.”
GM hasn’t always been faithful to that. “We didn’t have to keep GMC around,” Lyon says, but “this is a very unique brand. When we differentiate it more, we’re able to get more price.”
Customers will “pay more for this exclusive, premium truck,” he says. “Where we haven’t differentiated much, we don’t make much more of a margin than the Chevy does. And it turns out that’s not good business.”
Touch-Sensitive Controls
“We get into discussions with the electrical engineers,” Lyon says. “The system is capable of conveying all kinds of information, conveying all kinds of choices and options. The problem is if you explore them all … you start blowing the 2 second rule, which is kind of the agreement we have with [The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration], which is kind of [that] any task that you’re doing with the center stack shouldn’t take more than 2 seconds.”
As for Cadillac’s fully touch-sensitive system? It’s something the brand needed.
“Somebody that’s buying a Cadillac wants cutting edge,” Lyon says. “You can see that with BMW and iDrive, right? Most journalists hate it. Maybe they’ve learned to like it by now. Maybe they’ve gotten used to it. [But] If the vehicle didn’t offer that, you’d be not on the cutting edge of technology.”
Assistant Managing Editor-News
Kelsey Mays
Former Assistant Managing Editor-News Kelsey Mays likes quality, reliability, safety and practicality. But he also likes a fair price.