Pair expect to speed onto high-end auto scene
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Andrew Edwards
They have the respect. They have the ideas. Only time will tell if
they have enough.
“They” are Henrik Fisker and Bernhard Koehler, formerly of Ford
Motor Co.’s Global Advanced Design Studio in Irvine. The two have
worked together for more than a decade on high-powered speed demons
and have set out on their own to start a new sports-car company in
Newport Beach.
The pair announced the formation of Fisker Coachbuild last week.
Fisker, 41, lives in Newport Beach and said he and Koehler hope to
have their creations on the road and in showrooms by 2006.
“We are full speed ahead, and by the end of the year, we should
have a prototype,” Fisker said.
Fisker, who designed the Aston Martin DB-9 and the upcoming Aston
Martin V8 Vantage is aiming to create cars that combine speed, luxury
and exclusivity. He expects Fisker Coachbuild cars to cost between
$180,000 and $250,000, with production limited to 150 models per
design.
“One of our objectives is to create a car that’s really exclusive,
so that when you go to a restaurant, you’re the only guy or woman who
has one,” Fisker said.
Automotive analysts said Fisker and Koehler have a rough road
ahead. Starting a company like this takes a lot of seed money, and
the pair will market to a niche demographic -- wealthy auto
enthusiasts. But analysts also said the pair have a better shot than
most at making their company work.
“It’s a very fickle aspect of the market, and it could absolutely
go through the roof or the floor,” Motor Trend executive editor Matt
Stone said.
Stone called Fisker and Koehler “two pretty heavy dudes” whose
efforts will likely generate a good amount of attention in the
automotive press.
“It’s going to get a fair amount, because Henrik is a known
quantity,” Stone said. “It’s going to get play.”
But coverage in car magazines doesn’t guarantee sales, noted Peter
DeLorenzo, founder and publisher of online car magazine
Autoextremist.com.
“[Fisker’s] designs will play very well with the enthusiasts, but
oftentimes the enthusiasts don’t have the big bucks,” DeLorenzo said.
Fisker and Koehler started working together around 1992, when both
worked for BMW. The two have taken parallel career paths, working for
BMW subsidiary DesignworksUSA before heading to Ford’s design studios
in London and Irvine. Koehler’s most recent gig was his post as
director of business and operations at Ford’s Global Advanced Design
Studio.
“We have already been a team for many, many years, and we have
talent in different areas,” Koehler said. “Henrik is the design guy,
and I’m the business guy.”
Both Fisker and Koehler said their plans are financed by a group
of international investors but declined to disclose how much money
Fisker Coachbuild has in the bank. Koehler said he and Fisker want to
keep a good relationship with their former colleagues in the
mainstream auto industry, though they see production of their own
super sports cars in their future.
“This is where the heart is,” Koehler said. “We could come up with
the next Ford Fiesta if necessary, but this is what we’re really good
at.”
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards
@latimes.com.
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