Skip advert
Advertisement

Rinspeed announces plans for a driverless BMW i3

Geneva motor show debut for eccentric Swiss concept car

Swiss ‘idea factory’ Rinspeed has modified an electric BMW i3 to operate autonomously yet still, the claim goes, offer passengers the thrill of driving.

The theory behind the Budii concept, which will debut at the Geneva motor show, is deceptively simple. Operating driverlessly by default, when an occupant wants manual control – on a particularly appealing stretch of blacktop, for instance – a seven-axis robotic limb hands him or her the steering wheel.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Naturally the system is steer-by-wire, which limits its appeal for serious drivers. The Budii’s mission statement is more profound that satisfying the needs of lazy petrolheads, however, and the concept is tasked with fostering trust between man and machine as our personal transportation steadily becomes less driver-dependent.

“The autonomously driving car will require more than solving technical problems and legal issues in the next two decades,” says Rinspeed founder Frank Rinderknecht. “We not only have to redefine the interaction of man and machine, but must also raise question about responsibility tolerance and expectations.”

Rinderknecht has talked about developing a healthy, rather than a blind, trust in the capabilities of hardware and software. In support of this idea, the Budii boasts artificial intelligence and is programmed to recognise and learn from its surroundings.  

“In the future, cars will do just as we do. They will keep learning every day, and as a result will get better and better at mastering the complex challenges of modern-day private transport,” says Rinderknecht.

In terms of design, the Budii is even more divisive than the car on which it’s based. In features adjustable ride-height (up to 100mm), 19-inch Borbet alloy wheels and, in true Rinspeed style, a laser scanner periscope that helps map upcoming terrain and appropriately adjusts the car’s ride-height. Two ‘mini vehicles’ are also stored in retractable doors on either side of the car.

Vehicle autonomy is a recurrent theme for Rinspeed, which previously made a name for itself building such cars as an amphibious Lotus and a shooting-brake-cum-pickup-truck based on the Porsche 996 Carrera. At last year’s Geneva motor show the firm debuted a driverless version of the Tesla Model S.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Why the wild V8-powered Land Rover Defender D7X-R has ‘flight mode’
Land Rover Defender Dakar D7X-R
News

Why the wild V8-powered Land Rover Defender D7X-R has ‘flight mode’

The Land Rover Defender will take on the world’s most gruelling off-road race in 2026. Here’s our first look at the car that will do it
25 Nov 2025
How a sub-200bhp runabout exposes the problem with today’s performance cars
695C Turismo
Opinion

How a sub-200bhp runabout exposes the problem with today’s performance cars

A shortage of long-term test cars flags up a wider problem, says Meaden
27 Nov 2025
Everyone loves the idea of a GT car, so why does nobody buy them?
Aston Martin Vanquish
Opinion

Everyone loves the idea of a GT car, so why does nobody buy them?

We all love a great GT, says Jethro. Trouble is, no-one wants to buy them
21 Nov 2025