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Mazda has confirmed that it will
stage the world premieres of the
new Mazda Furai concept vehicle
and the heavily revised new
Mazda RX-8 sports car in Detroit
at the North American
International Auto Show.
Following its show-stopping
debut at the 2007 Tokyo Motor
Show in October, the Mazda Taiki
concept vehicle also will make
its North American debut, the
first time it has been shown
outside Japan. Additionally,
Mazda will have a special
display of racecars on its stand
during the press days, and the
full line-up of production cars
for consumers to view for the
public days.
Mazda Furai –‘Sound of the
wind’
Inspired by the fact that, on
any given weekend, there are
more Mazdas and Mazda-powered
racing cars in action on
circuits across the United
States than any other brand,
Mazda has created the Mazda
Furai. It is the sort of car
that could only come from a
company that incorporates the
‘Soul of a Sports Car’ into
everything it builds, but with
an eye toward the future and the
environment through the use of
ethanol (E100) produced by
British Petroleum (BP).
Furai takes Mazda’s unique
Nagare (Japanese for ‘flow’)
design language a step further
as it is translated into a
concept car based on an American
Le Mans Series sports racing
car. The car utilizes the
Courage C65 chassis the company
campaigned in the ALMS series
only two seasons ago, and the
450-hp three-rotor rotary engine
that distinguishes it from
anything else on the track.
“Furai purposely blurs
boundaries that have
traditionally distinguished
street cars from racing cars,”
says Franz von Holzhausen,
Mazda’s North American director
of design. “Historically, there
has been a gap between
single-purpose racecars and the
sportiest of street-legal
production models — commonly
called supercars — that emulate
the real racers on the road.
Furai bridges that gap like no
car has ever done before.
“Mazda’s critically acclaimed
Nagare design language describes
the flow of water, air, people
or things moving in one
direction. Mazda Nagare is
flow, with an insightful and
spirited styling, which, in
Mazda Furai, invokes a raw,
unfettered desire to possess
everything this car represents,”
enthuses Holzhausen.
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