Chrysler Imperial Concept Showcases Best of Both Worlds  
Elegance and comfort meets stable, smooth driving performance 
Like  the great Imperials of Chrysler’s storied past, the 2006 Imperial  concept vehicle is designed as Chrysler’s flagship, a luxury sedan that  is elegant, provocative, aspirational, yet attainable. 
For  inspiration, the designers looked not only to the classic Imperials of  the 1930s and 1950s but also to Chrysler’s long tradition of creative  concept cars, from the earlier Chrysler d’Elegance and Falcon to the  more recent Chrysler Chronos and Firepower. This rich heritage is  expressed in the crisp line that parallels the sill, then arches up  over the rear wheel and flows to the rear of the car, signaling that  this is a powerful rear-drive automobile. 
A similarly-shaped  line rises up over the front wheel and flows rearward, falling slightly  as in moves into the doors. To fully realize the subtleties of the  chaste body surfaces, every area was lovingly hand-sculpted in the  hallowed tradition of the custom coachbuilt LeBaron bodies of the  classic era. 
“The Imperial’s exterior artfully blends a  stately nobility, hand craftsmanship, and modern dynamic sculpture and  proportion,” says Mike Nicholas, principal exterior designer. 
To  realize the proportions the designers sought, the Imperial, mounted on  a 123-inch wheelbase, is 17 inches longer and six inches higher than a  300 sedan. The roof was pulled rearward to enlarge the cabin as well as  to create the luxury of length in side view. Most importantly,  passengers sit nearly seven inches higher. Combined with the higher  hood and deck and the large 22-inch aluminum wheels, this gives the  Imperial the noble stance the designers envisioned. 
V-shaped  in plan view, the front end is dominated by a central upright radiator  grille which imparts a stately eminence previously unobtainable in all  but the most expensive of imported motorcars. Composed of narrow  chiseled linear elements of brushed and polished aluminum, the grille  is capped by a bright header emblazoned with the Chrysler wings. A  polished molding, extending from the grille header to the base of the  windshield, bisects the raised hood plane. 
Nested beneath  browed cavities, the polished aluminum parabolic pods housing the  projector-beam headlights reprise the individual free-standing  headlamps of the Imperials of both the early thirties and the early  sixties. At the rear, the individual circular taillights with floating  outer rings combine modern LED lighting with a look evocative of the  signature “gun sight” taillights of previous Imperials. Separate  slender LED lamp units provide for park, turn and back-up lamp  functions. 
Complementing the hood, the raised deck lid is also  V-shaped and accented by signature silver wings that unfold across its  surface.  Body ornamentation is confined to the upper bumper bars, side  view mirrors, side window reveals, and the handsomely-sculpted door  handles.   
       
  Hinged at the A and C-pillars, the wide doors  can be flung open a la French doors for a dignified entry, revealing  the absence of the customary B-pillar and permitting a dramatic  realization of the entire interior. Attention to detail and materials  is unsurpassed. In studied contrast to the monochromatic Imperial  Bronze exterior, the high-contrast four-passenger cabin is smartly  two-toned in rich Bay Brown and buttery Birch Creme, inviting the  viewer into a world of supple leather and soft suede complemented by  California burl wood and metallic-like accents rendered in a lustrous  warm bronze.   
The interior is characterized by the interplay  of harmonious, expressively curving shapes in which the fuller forms of  the instrument panel, door armrest and map pocket elements appear to  “float” above sculpted recessed cavities. Even the seats seem to float  above the floor. Their elliptically-curved bronze-and-burl side shields  echo similar elements recessed into the full-length floor console.  
   
   “We wanted everything inside to be nested, fitted and hand-crafted,”  says Nick Malachowski, principal interior designer, “with every  component subtly reinforcing the hand-sculpted look of the exterior.” 
This  is a driver’s car, with a minimum of distracting gadgetry. A simple  touch pad with intuitive controls, mounted close-by on the suspended  center console armrest, permits the driver to adjust settings for  radio, climate and navigation functions. The driver air bag/horn pad is  fixed, allowing the radio and cruise-control switches to remain settled  in the same position regardless of the turning steering wheel. Boldly  bisecting the uncluttered floating wood-and-bronze instrument panel are  two large circular pods encircling sculpted gauges rendered in satin  with polished aluminum bezels. Reminiscent of earlier Imperials, the  exquisitely-detailed gauge faces are deliberately designed to satisfy  the soul as well as inform the mind. 
Since the windshield  glass is carried up onto the mid-point of the roof, front seat  occupants enjoy a comprehensive view of the passing scene. All glass  has a distinctive bronze tint to harmonize with the car’s color  palette. Rear passengers can recline their individual seats while  watching different movies, thanks to the console-mounted dual-view  entertainment screen and wireless headsets. The rear seat headsets  store in the package tray at the touch of a button when not needed. 
Finally,  there is the luxury of expressive illumination inspired by the artistry  and elegance found in modern interior architecture. LED lighting,  placed behind the “floating” elements of the instrument panel and  doors, is used to enhance the sculptural elements of the interior. LED  lights also provide indirect cove lighting for the headliner, which in  addition offers the choice of electroluminescently-lit fabric or  directed-beam spotlights located in the overhead console.  
Drawing  on the rich heritage of its memorable predecessors and endowed with  modern dynamic proportions, this newest Imperial, crafted with a  nobility of stance and purpose, is the finest expression of the  Chrysler marque. 
Story by Chrysler