CES 2020: Mercedes VISION AVTR Concept a Beacon for Sustainability

Inspired by the James Cameron film “Avatar,” the recyclable concept envisions a completely new interaction between humans, machines and nature.

Mercedes unveiled its VISION AVTR concept vehicle at CES 2020, which represents an idea called sustainable luxury. (Mercedes-Benz)

At the keynote for the 2020 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Mercedes-Benz unveiled its VISION AVTR concept vehicle, which represents a far-forward look at the company’s products in terms of design, materials and technologies. Inspired by the James Cameron film Avatar (with the director on hand at CES for its reveal), and representing a sustainable vision of zero-emission mobility, the VISION AVTR concept was introduced by Ola Källenius, M-B’s chairman of the board.

The Mercedes-Benz VISION AVTR concept foregoes a steering wheel and instead uses biometric recognition and hand gestures to control vehicle functions. (Mercedes-Benz)

The fully-electric, AWD, 4-seat concept features a 110-kWh battery and a 700-km (434-mi.) range, and is M-B’s idea of sustainable luxury – a form of electromobility “in harmony with people and nature.” The VISION AVTR concept uses 100%-recyclable organic battery technology and leverages a host of artificial intelligence (AI) to maximize vehicle performance and efficiency, including integrated solar-panels designed to provide power back to the grid.

James Cameron’s Avatar team reportedly collaborated closely with the M-B engineering team on the concept to inspire new forms of interaction with a vehicle. AVTR is also an acronym for Advanced Vehicle TransfoRmation, embodying the future mobility vision of Mercedes-Benz designers, engineers and trend researchers for the distant future.

At the CES keynote, Källenius emphasized the idea of auto manufacturing as a sustainable enterprise both in terms of materials and in the energy required for propulsion. “The philosophy of reduce, reuse and recycle will lead us to our ultimate goal: the zero-impact car – a car that uses technology to provide maximum fascination for people but has zero negative impact on the planet,” he said. “This may be in the distant future. But it's our goal nonetheless.”

All-new design and UX

The VISION AVTR uses what M-B calls a holistic concept that fuses styling by combining the design themes of the exterior, interior and user experience (UX), a design structure labeled “inside-out.” Inspired by several creatures from the movie Avatar, its stretched "One Bow" organic design supposedly offers some keen insight into M-B’s future design language.

The Mercedes-Benz VISION AVTR concept can “communicate” via the 33 bionic flaps on its back. (Mercedes-Benz)
The Mercedes-Benz VISION AVTR concept uses a design language called “inside out” that fuses interior, exterior and UX styling. (Mercedes-Benz)

There is no steering wheel, with the tiller replaced by a multifunctional control element in the center console. Owners place a hand on the control unit to wake up the vehicle, and it can recognize an owner by their heartbeat and respiratory pattern. By lifting a hand, a menu is projected onto the owner’s palm, permitting a selection of functions. A dash converted into a “curved display module” to is used to present info and connect passengers to the outside world.

Compostable battery chemistry

A first for M-B, the VISION AVTR concept uses a battery featuring a graphene-based organic cell chemistry that is free of rare-earth elements and metals. The materials of the battery are recyclable and even compostable, making them free from fossil resources and looping the vehicle into part of the “circular economy.” That sustainable vision extends to the interior, which uses M-B’s vegan Dinamica leather, and the AVTR’s floor is covered by a fast-growing rattan called Karuun, harvested by hand in Indonesia.

The AWD M-B concept can power the front and rear axles in opposite directions, permitting it to “crab” sideways at angles of up to 30 degrees, giving it animal-like movements. That theme is carried over to the 33 scales on the back of the AVTR, what M-B calls "bionic flaps," which can communicate with the driver or those that can see the car through flowing movements and gestures.

“The aim of the VISION AVTR is to show us a signpost for a livable future, even if it will probably never be built. The VISION AVTR makes speculative science visible and tangible,” said Alexander Mankowsky, futurologist at Mercedes-Benz. “The VISION AVTR serves as an imaginative guide to a future in which our relationship with ourselves, nature and technology has changed. Human beings see themselves as part of the biosphere and are in contact with it. The future luxury of Mercedes-Benz will be based on this.”