Mazda
Furai -- 'Sound of the wind'
Inspired
by the fact that, on any given weekend,
there are more Mazdas and Mazda-powered
cars road-raced in the United States
than any other brand, the Mazda Furai
(Japanese for "sound of the wind"
and pronounced "fu-rye") is
the sort of car that could only come
from a company that incorporates the
"Soul of a Sports Car" into
everything it builds, but with an eye
toward the future and the environment
through the use of 100% ethanol produced
in partnership with British Petroleum
(BP).
Furai
takes Mazda's unique Nagare (Japanese
for "flow") design language
a step further as it is translated into
a concept car based on an American Le
Mans Series (ALMS) racing car. The car
utilizes the Courage C65 chassis the
company campaigned in the ALMS series
only two seasons ago, and the 450-hp
three-rotor rotary engine that distinguishes
it from anything else on the track.
Says
Franz von Holzhausen, Mazda's North
American director of design, "Furai
purposely blurs boundaries that have
traditionally distinguished street cars
from track cars. Historically, there
has been a gap between single-purpose
racecars and street-legal models --
commonly called supercars
--
that emulate the real racers on the
road. Furai bridges that gap like no
car has ever done before."
Mazda's
critically acclaimed Nagare design language
describes the flow of water, air, people
or things moving in one direction. Mazda
Nagare is flow, with an insightful and
spirited styling, which, in Mazda Furai,
invokes a raw, unfettered desire to
possess everything this car represents.
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