Swedish car fans will have a new pilgrimage to make starting April 14th.
BYMADDOX KAY|PUBLISHED APR 11, 2024 12:55 PM EDT
n April 14, 1927,
Swedish entrepreneurs Assar Gabrielsson and Gustaf Larsson produced the first
example of their first car, the Volvo ÖV4.
The open-topped car rolled off the assembly line, an engineer put it in first
gear, and… the car rolled backward.
The official
explanation was that someone had installed the rear differential the wrong way;
the unofficial one: a young, ambitious company, perhaps moving a little too
fast. Though Volvo got off to an inauspicious start, by the company's third
year it was already turning a profit, and since then has established a reputation
for durability, design, and most of all, innovation in safety.
Now, Volvo is
celebrating its 97th birthday with the opening of what it calls "World of Volvo"
in the company’s hometown of Gothenburg, Sweden. I was invited to visit this
joint venture between Volvo Cars and Volvo Group—those are the guys who build
the semi-trucks, diggers, and other fun stuff. It’s a part corporate museum,
part pine-filled event space that the company calls a “brand experience
center.” Think BMW Welt,
but with mass timber and more natural light.
For those of us who
geek out on cars and engineering, the most interesting part of it all is the
exhibition, which starts out with an interactive portion before walking through
Volvo’s history. In the interactive hall, you can simulate distracted and drowsy
driving, dock a virtual reality boat (remember, Volvo makes more than just
cars), and walk through some of Volvo’s inventions, from three-point seatbelts
to the lambda, or oxygen, sensor.
But I was there for
the cars. There are roughly 50 of them, spanning Volvo’s archives from that
very first ÖV4 design to the present day. Some of the most significant
include Irv Gordon’s three-million-mile P1800, the Environmental Concept Car that previewed the P2 S80’s design with
a wild turbine-hybrid powertrain back in 1992, and the Iron Maven, a PV544 that a team of female engineers painstakingly swapped the
drivetrain and interior from a modern S60 T8 into.
The Volvo Environmental Concept Car was
incredibly ahead of its time, even if its turbine-hybrid drivetrain didn't make
production. Maddox Kay
Then, there are
things you’ve never heard of—an electric concept from the ‘80s designed to
carry urban mail, the King of Sweden’s car that he uses once a year in a
vintage rally, and the 1972 Volvo Safety Concept that featured a reverse camera
in the form of a giant lens where the license plate would go, hooked up to a
Mitsubishi display in the dash. Yes, back when car companies were just getting
around to implementing three-point belts, Volvo showcased impact bumpers, a
frontal airbag, and a working rearview camera—albeit a very analog one—in a concept
vehicle.
The exhibit isn’t
huge, but each car represents a chapter or footnote in the company’s story and
tells part of a compelling story in a way that’s equally accessible to serious
enthusiasts and those casually interested. The 50 cars here represent a small
fraction of the classics Volvo owns, and the company promises to rotate them
with themed exhibitions.
Volvo was thinking about rearview cameras all
the way back in 1972. Maddox Kay
Given the enormous
investment, World of Volvo isn’t just for car geeks. The five-story structure
includes an airy conference center, an events hall, and even a restaurant by
award-winning chef Stefan Karlsson. (I’m pretty sure this is the only car
museum that can add “Michelin-star chef” to its resume.)
Notably, it’s also
where U.S. customers who opt for Volvo’s popular European delivery program will come to receive their
cars, enjoy a meal, and perhaps explore the company’s history before setting
off on the European road trip of a lifetime. For that purpose, it’s the perfect
venue.
World of Volvo opens
to the public on Sunday, April 14. If you find yourself near Gothenburg, it’s
definitely worth a visit. Until then, enjoy some more photographs.
Source: thedrive
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