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Mazda's Taiki concept is the fourth concept car in the Nagare design series, taking the 'flow' theme to new levels and reflecting the possible direction for the future of Mazda spo
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rts cars. The Taiki employs a front-engine rear-drive layout, a unique 2-seat configuration and Mazda's next-generation RENESIS rotary engine.
Visually, the concept (whose name expresses the atmosphere - called taiki in Japanese) looks as if it was honed in a wind tunnel, with swooping, curvaceous panels that make the most of aerodynamic
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s. The proportions of the car, a stretched coupe form with short overhangs topped by an all-glass canopy, "visually expresses the flow of air" and was inspired by the image of a pair of Hagoromo - the flowing robes that enable a celestial maiden to fly in Japanese legend - floating down from the sky.
The interior was inspired by Japanese koinobori - the decorative "climbing carp streamers". Designers were charged with creating an 'air-tube' cockpit, visually depicting the flow of the wind from the dashboard and seats down to the door trim.
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Design Development: Mazda Hakaze concept
Mazda Taiki concept - Tokyo 2007
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