Here’s What People In The 1950s Thought Cars Would Look Like Now

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It’s hard to predict the future. Do you know what cars will look like 50 years from now? Heck, do you even have an idea of what your life will look like a half-century from this moment? Barring time travelers reading our site, nobody knows what the future holds, but it is fun to predict where humanity will be. Over a half-century ago, many thought we’d all be driving flying cars and perhaps even daily commuting to a Mars colony by now. One of the Petersen Automotive Museum’s newest exhibits shows one designer’s vision of the future. The 1956 American Motors Astra-Gnome was the Nash Metropolitan-based concept car designed to look like what a car might have looked like in 2000, and it gets cooler the more you look at it.

I have even better news, once you’re done reading this, you can see this car in person! The Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles, California is launching the “Eyes On the Road: Art of the Automotive Landscape” exhibition. Petersen Automotive Museum Executive Director Terry L. Karges says the exhibit “represents the fusion of artistic expression, automotive ingenuity and observation of the motoring environment,” and that “it also perfectly illustrates how artists can reveal the beauty hidden in plain sight throughout the world in which we drive.” Tickets are on sale for the opening reception on March 29, and I bet you’ll have a grand time.

There will be a number of vintage futuristic vehicles there from the 1934 Dymaxion to the 1969 Chevrolet Astro III. The highlight vehicle of the exhibit will be Richard Arbib’s vision of what a car from the year 2000 could look like. It makes you wish that the future actually happened.

Timeless Designs

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The American Motors Astra-Gnome was the work of Richard H. Arbib, a designer who had a career spanning five decades. Like many fascinating figures in classic automotive design, Arbib didn’t just pen vehicles, but he was an industrial designer with a vast portfolio.

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Arbib was born in 1917 in New York and graduated from the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn in 1939. As Hemmings reports, in school, Arbib was trained in industrial design and he was able to land a job soon after at General Motors. At GM, Arbib worked on the automaker’s contribution to the New York World’s Fair and, under the direction of designer Harley Earl, a consultant for the General Motors Art and Colour team.

Venture History
A 1957 Hamilton Ventura, claimed to be the world’s first electric watch, designed by Arbib. – Hamilton Watch

As the New York Times writes, Arbib was later sent off into World War II.

There, Arbib made use of his design skills with Republic Aircraft for work on wing-tip fuel tanks for Boeing B-47 bombers. Upon his return from the war, Arbib found himself back in the embrace of Earl, beginning work with the Harley Earl Corporation, where he found himself penning Argus cameras, Benrus watches, U.S. Royal tires, and the interiors of passenger cars used by the Union Pacific. Arbib’s name is also on a television he designed in 1947.

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Henney Motor Co. via Alden Jewell

However, Arbib didn’t want to stick around in Detroit forever, so he left that world behind and set up his own firm in Manhattan. His first notable contract was with the Henney Automobile Company, then the largest manufacturer of hearses and ambulances. Arbib then penned professional cars for a few years until 1954. One of Arbib’s designs under the Henney umbrella was the distinctive Packard Super Station Wagon (above), a custom build that featured striking bubble-shaped windows in its rear.

Arbib’s works span far and wide outside even those hearses and ambulances. In 1957, Arbib designed the Ventura, the first battery-powered watch for the Hamilton Watch Company (above). Arbib’s other contributions to 1950s design include the Century Coronado hardtop speedboat for the Century Boat Company, the Packard Pan American, a radio, the Packard Monte Carlo, and reportedly, the narrow whitewall tire.

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Z. Taylor Vinson collection / Hagley Museum and Library

Arbib passed in 1995, leaving behind a legacy of stunning industrial design. Reportedly, Arbib even designed an ambulance based on an early Ford Thunderbird! Perhaps Arbib’s best work was found during his design work with the American Motors Corporation.

In 1955, AMC hired Arbib to style 1956 model year Hudsons, which would share bodies with senior Nash vehicles. Arbib was limited in what he could do with the Hudsons as the vehicles were of unibody construction and the automaker didn’t want major changes to stamping between the model lines. Despite that, Arbib cracked out a tri-tone design with a V theme. Unfortunately, this couldn’t save Nash from the brink.

Looking To The Future

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In a career with so many striking designs, one stands out as totally out-of-this-world. American Motors commissioned Arbib to create a new concept car, and the resulting Astra-Gnome looked far into a future where cars would be a bit more like planes. The Petersen gives us some history:

The Astra-Gnome was Richard Arbib’s vision of what a car would look like in the year 2000. American Motors Corporation hired Arbib to design the car, which was built on a 1955 Nash Metropolitan chassis. The body was manufactured by Andrew Mazzara and featured changeable colored aluminum panels, and the wheels were hidden behind full fender skirts to suggest a floating hovercraft. The vehicle was a highlight of the 1956 New York Auto Show and was featured on the cover of Newsweek. The Astra-Gnome was the epitome of futuristic space-age design that flourished in the 1950s.

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As you can tell from the above description, a theme of the Astra-Gnome was a vehicle previewing a future where cars might not have rolled on tires, but hovered across the ground. Thus, aviation was also a central theme of the concept. Arbib called this vehicle a “Time and Space Car” and it was constructed in just four months. If you’re confused, an advertisement from Arbib’s company offered some clarity:

The “Time” element in the appearance of the Astra-Gnome in the year 1956 can be termed relative. Its features are timeless as far as basic automotive design improvements are concerned. Everyone has always wanted a smaller car that has plenty of luggage space! The Astra-Gnome provides just this through its unique “integra-luggage” system with distributes suitcases into otherwise wasted space areas.

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Everyone has always wanted a full vision top without troubles of a convertible! The Gnome’s bubble canopy, plus air conditioning, gives this open feeling, but with no wind noise and “walk-in” entrance and exit ease. Everyone has always wanted futuristic styling, but in a practical form that is functional – not just different! The Gnome has an “out of this world” look, yet features interchangeable colored aluminum trim panels in place of gaudy paint schemes, functional big car bumpers in place of small car weaknesses, and admirably adapts to unit-body construction.

These, and a host of other features, are here and now in the Astra-Gnome, but it will only be a matter of time until in some form they appear in future production cars. These features are not concerned with high horsepower or competition car performance, because as product stylists we do not believe the primary task of the appearance designer is a mechanical one.

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It’s a bit tricky to discern the Gnome’s scale from the photos, so you may be surprised to learn it’s about 6 feet wide and 13.5 feet long. For comparison, that’s a foot or so shorter than a Toyota RAV4, and the same width. Arbib’s company notes that while this car was the length of a small car in the same era, it was as wide as an average car of the time. That meant the Astra-Gnome gave the space of a larger car while maintaining a small size. As noted above, the Astra-Gnome also advertised the safety of a larger car thanks to its larger bumpers.

The “Space” part of the car was quite literal, as Arbib used every bit of otherwise dead space as storage dubbed “integra-luggage,” with six suitcases and large 6x6x20″ gloveboxes built into the vehicle offering plenty of stowage. The interior was also a sight to behold, with a Hamilton celestial time zone clock as the centerpiece, said to allow for flight-type navigation.

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The huge dome and sculpted body allowed occupants to walk into and out of the vehicle and they sat in an interior covered in leather, including the floor. In addition to the celestial time zone clock, other interior features included a Hi-Fi radio, a record player, and air-conditioning – the latter would surely be necessary for comfortable summer driving beneath the dome. The car had all of this in a vehicle that was 25 percent larger than the donor Metropolitan but still weighed under 2,000 pounds.

At some point after the Astra-Gnome’s debut on the show circuit, the vehicle disappeared, only to be found in a New York building in 1980. After its discovery, the Astra-Gnome was restored to show car condition. The vehicle is now in the hands of the Metropolitan Pit Stop Museum, who loaned it out to the Petersen Automotive Museum for this exhibit.

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Sadly, like so many concept cars, nothing ever came of the Astra-Gnome, but I’m glad someone saved it. It’s fascinating to see what someone in the mid-1950s thought the year 2000 would be like. I know we aren’t zipping around in flying cars like science fiction might suggest, but technology has evolved further than anyone in 1950 could imagine. The Astra-Gnome featured a record player and today, your handheld television, phone, and computer can snag about any song you want to play practically out of thin air. And forget about clocks, how about a moving map showing you exactly where you’re going? In many ways, we far exceeded the 1950s dream of the future.

Still, I bet looking at the Astra-Gnome would be like nothing else. If you’re in California, the opening reception for “Eyes On the Road: Art of the Automotive Landscape” happens on March 29. General tickets, which net you admissions and drinks, are $45. Penthouse access and food will cost $75, or $53 for museum members. After that, the Petersen Museum says the exhibition will run in the Armand Hammer Foundation Gallery through November 2024.

(Images: Petersen Automotive Museum – Kahn Media, unless otherwise noted.)

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49 thoughts on “Here’s What People In The 1950s Thought Cars Would Look Like Now

  1. Two things…

    1. Heck, do you even have an idea of what your life will look like a half-century from this moment?” Well, it will look like a coffin lid lining, I believe.
    2. Why does this car look like a Powell Homer?
  2. As a watch guy I love the Ventura, though it’s not to everyone’s taste, looking up his name he did quite a few designs for Hamilton, a lot of them asymmetrical, which I appreciate.

    1. Not a watch person at all (I haven’t worn one since cell phones became truly ubiquitous, because why?) but the Ventura has been on my bucket list forever.

      1. The Ventura comes in a lot of varieties, some pretty affordable. Watches are mostly jewelry, I also prefer mechanicals and automatics, so it’s not about precise time keeping either. A 1$0 Casio digital watch keeps far better time than any of my mechanicals, or even any $100k watch. Most of mine I put together myself, the ones I haven’t are a few rare quartzes and a bunch of vintage mechanicals.

          1. Anything with a designer name! Except for Anne Kline, they use cheap quartz movements but they are always name brand (Miyota) and are put together well. Timex is coming back from shitbox to quality with the “Q” range. Sieko is overrated, I use their movements they’re great, but the rest is cheap especially the crystals (glass covering the dial) they scratch too easy. Any brand that promises to “cut out the middle man” they’re scams. Watches that punch above their weight, the Kia Stingers of watches; Dan Henry and Undone, they have interesting watches with good parts and no crazy mark ups. Best bang for your buck the Invicta Pro Diver, honestly as good as a Seiko for a fraction of the price. I’m actually wearing a modified one on my wrist right now. It uses the Seiko NH35 movement, the 2Jz of watch movements, durable cheap and fits in everything

  3. The future used to look a lot cooler before we were living in it. Can we switch the track to a cool retro-future instead of cyberpunk dystopia without the aesthetic? Or whatever puts us on-track for the post-scarcity utopia of Star Trek?

    1. Before you get the Federation you get the Bell Riots and World War 3. Or at least you did until people started messing with the timeline. At this rate who knows?

      1. That’s fair–we could be on track. I just want to live in the good future now. I’ll stop messing with the timeline, since I definitely don’t know what I’m doing.

  4. Let’s review…

    • American Motors
    • Dome top
    • Length of a small car in the same era
    • Wide as an average car of the time
    • “Walk-in” entrance and exit (a big door)

    In 1955, Richard H. Arbib may have missed the mark for vehicles of the year 2000, but he did hit the design points for the 1975 AMC Pacer.

  5. Bethesda must have really done their homework, because they really nailed the 1950’s perception of the future look for cars in the Fallout universe.

  6. In the Gnome-Mobile,
    The Gnome-Mobile,
    We’re rolling along in the Gnome-Mobile!
    Oh, what a wonderful way to feel,
    Rolling along in the Gnome-Mobile!

    1. My father had antique cars (alas no Rolls Royces) so we were subjected to that movie as children. I still knew the tune but couldn’t remember the plot so I looked it up. Classic Disney dreck, but in a good way.

      1. It was one of the last films actually produced by Walt Disney, himself, released about 7 months after he died. The real shocker is that it was based on a story by Upton Sinclair.

  7. I wonder if Tom Karen saw this? It has some Land Speeder vibes to it, and hell of a coincidence they were both built on small British car platforms (Nash Metropolitan & Bond Bug)

  8. That interior would make for a refreshing concept in a modern car and could integrate well with A/C, audio and nav controls.
    Also, that Super Station Wagon is awesome.

  9. That giant dash clock is my favorite part.

    Arbib also designed the Hamilton Everest, another wild-shaped – kinda square-ish – mid-century watch. Hamilton went through quite a phase of avant-garde design back then, culminating in the stuff it created for Stanley Kubrick for 2001 (which is likely a big part of why Christopher Nolan has it produce watches for his movies).

    1. That’s what caught my eye. “Speedometer? Down by the driver’s right knee. What they’re gonna need to look at a lot more often is the clock.”

  10. The idea that cars should be inspired by aircraft/spacecraft, or might someday evolve into them, is so fascinating to me.

    So widespread it was almost taken for granted in the 50s, and never really again since.

    1. Me too. You can totally get why Chrysler said, sure, let’s make a car with a turbine engine and let people actually drive it around.

      It’s interesting how tv like Happy Days would later lull people into thinking of the ’50s as this idyllic time, when really it was anything but.

  11. What they thought the cars of the future would look like vs what the cars of the future actually look like. <Insert images of modern Lexus and BMW grills/>

    I feel like we’ve let down our past selves, I’d much rather drive to work every day in this beautiful space-age looking Gnome.

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