1938 Buick Y-Job, the World’s First Concept Car – Design You Trust — Design Daily Since 2007

1938 Buick Y-Job, the World’s First Concept Car

It’s easy to look at the Harley Earl-designed 1938 Buick Y-Job today and dismiss it as just another neat old car. But put it in the context of 1938, and you’ll realize that it is one of the most radical, influential cars of all time.

h/t: vintag.es

When you look at the Y-Job, you realize it was nothing like that. It was long, low, wide. No back seat. No running boards. 13-inch wheels. Intricate detail work like the grille and chrome along the sides. Not only were the headlights integrated into the fenders, but they were hidden behind doors.

The Y-Job was GM’s first concept car and an icon in the automotive industry. Constructed in 1938 under the direction of Harley J. Earl, GM’s first design chief, the Y-Job made the rounds of the auto show circuit. But the Y-Job was not a turntable queen; Earl regularly drove the low-slung two-seater on the streets of Detroit where its appearance must have seemed as alien as a flying saucer.

Buick called it “Y” because so many makers dubbed experimental cars “X”. Styling and mechanical features of the “Y Job” showed up on GM products, particularly Buick and Cadillac, throughout the ’40s. Particularly noteworthy is the introduction of a wide horizontal grille with thin vertical bars, which remains a Buick styling feature to this day.

But dream cars, like yesterday’s newspapers, have a short shelf life. The Y-Job’s innovative styling and advanced features soon paled alongside even more futuristic products from GM’s supercharged design staff. The Y-Job was eventually consigned to a warehouse, and later transferred to the Sloan Museum in Flint, Mich. There the Y-Job languished in dusty anonymity – until a burgeoning interest in Detroit’s fanciful dream cars rescued the Y-Job and its descendants from obscurity.

As historians and enthusiasts began to appreciate the significance of these landmark vehicles, the Y-Job was returned to its former glory as the centerpiece of a concept car revival at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Mich. In 1993, the Y-Job came home to the GM Design Center in Warren, Mich., where it now resides as an honored member of GM’s heritage collection. In 2001, Buick recreated the Y-job with modern advancements called the Buick Blackhawk drawing extensively from the Y-job.



If you want more awesome content, subscribe to 'Design You Trust Facebook page. You won't be disappointed.

More Inspiring Stories

Beautiful Photos of the Chrysler Turbine Car
The Kollie - Cybernetic Organism
Warsteiner International Hot Air Balloon Show
World's First Smart Virtual Store Opens in Korea
"Extavium" Museum in Potsdam, Germany
How Does The City Look With Self Driving Cars? The Smiling Car Shows You The Answer
What is the WEEE Man and What does He Represent?
Once Upon The War: Introducing The Kharkiv School of Photography
They Came To A Cinema Near You!: Attack Of The B-Movie Posters
Low-Budget Glamour Shots That Are Just Too Terrible For Words
Your Beautiful Home In 1974 On A Budget
Fight Like A Gentleman: The Art Of Self Defense, ca. 1940s
The Paul Milinski Retro Futuristic Dreamscapes Are Serenity Manifest
Bad Girls: Movie Posters of Dangerous Dames, Sizzling Sirens, and Gun-Toting Gals
China Prepares to Launch Its First Space Laboratory Module Tiangong-1
The United Kingdom’s Royal Mail Issues Postage Stamps Celebrating Classic British Video Games
"Sweetheart Grips": WWII Soldiers Would Make Clear Grips For Their Pistols To Display Their Sweethearts
The Legacy of Paul Sougy: Mid-Century Scientific Illustrations that Influenced a Generation
Nostalgic Photos Of American Teenage Girls At Texas Beaches During The 1980s
The 1958 Plymouth Tornado Concept Car Has Been Found And Restored
"Sunken Time": Soviet Russia, XX Century, 1962-1992, In Black & White Photographs By Mikhail Dashevsky
Meet Some Crazy Bikes of 90s
PORTAL: An Interactive Bridge to Unity Connects Two Countries
Stunning Photos of Betty Davis and Her Bold, Funky Style in the Late 1960s and ’70s