BusinessWeek has a fantastic article about some of the trials and tribulations that MINI went through with the design process on the new MINI Clubman. Here’s an excerpt:

>In updating the Clubman, (Gert) Hildebrand stuck closely to the concept car shown at the 2005 Frankfurt Auto Show which featured the split rear doors of the original Mini Clubman Estate (1960s) and the Morris Mini Traveller (1959). “The split doors are unique,” says the 53-year-old German designer. “When you open them, the rear taillight remains stuck on the car like goggles or glasses.”

>But Hildebrand made one huge departure from the past with the introduction of the “Clubdoor”-a rear passenger door on the right side of the vehicle, which has no exterior handle and can only be opened from the inside when the front door is also open (for safety). The Clubman door opens in the opposite direction to the main front door, to make it easier to get in the back seat.

>The question is whether the highly individualistic Mini crowd will embrace it. “Butterfly doors are something every designer wants to do. But they are a bit of a risk,” says Christoph Stürmer, senior researcher at Global Insight in Frankfurt, noting that few automakers historically have dared give a nod to such doors-and that Mini buyers prefer to put their own stamp of originality on the car. But, Hildebrand insists, “It’s a comfort door. It’s hidden functionality.”

>Hildebrand spent four years on the Clubman’s design, tussling daily with BMW’s engineers over the complexity introduced by the Clubman door and the split rear doors and taillights.

The full (and highly recommended) article can be found below:

[ Mini Clubman, Big on Design ] BusinessWeek