The Interior of the Future—What Happens When the Steering Wheel Goes Away?
How the coming age of autonomy will radically reshape the car’s cabin.The insides of today's cars carry a radically different style than they did 50 years ago—chrome and vinyl have been replaced by piano black plastic and Alcantara, for example—yet the core function of the interior has stayed the same: piloting the machine. The steering wheel and pedals haven't changed much; they're still positioned within easy reach of the driver and continue to take up a significant chunk of space.
Likewise, the same concessions are being made to the car's traditional mechanical components. The transmission tunnel, a meaty divider between left and right, remains the most significant spatial compromise in many cars—forcing a rigid, inflexible cockpit layout.
In the coming autonomous age, all that will change. When the driver controls finally disappear, the car will pilot itself and rely on only the most basic of inputs from its occupants as they're whisked away to wherever they ask it to go.
Meanwhile, the electrification of the automobile will usher in a new era of interior design, thanks to the proliferation of flexible, flat-floor configurations suitable for work, play, and everything in between. What will the future of the cabin look like? Here are some things to keep an eye out for over the next few decades as the car inevitably evolves.
An Interior That Changes With Your Needs
When designers have complete freedom to rethink an interior sans driver controls or mechanical limitations, cars will begin to look radically different on the inside.
Sam Abuelsamid, principal analyst for e-mobility at Guidehouse Insights, referenced a few current prototype autonomous vehicles: "The Cruise Origin and Zoox VH6 shift the interior layout to carriage seating (with everyone facing the center). This leaves more open space for legroom and easier ingress/egress. It can also facilitate flexibility for inserting lockers for last-mile delivery or accommodating wheelchairs."
A car that can convert to a delivery van could generate its owner profits when it would otherwise be siting idle in a parking lot. But a car that can shift its interior to suit different customer needs could also be very powerful. Volvo put forth a compelling idea for a future like this with its 360c concept. The vision here is less about taking your living space with you but instead creating a new space that dynamically reconfigures based on what you're doing, who you're doing it with, and where you're going.
"We explored four themes for the interior layout," Lisa Reeves, head of interior design at Volvo Cars, said about the 360c. The first two themes entail four seats facing each other around a slender table. One is for family time, browsing the morning news, and eating breakfast. The second is similar but configured more for business, "a static office space on the outskirts of the city or for meetings on the move," Reeves said. Here, the window glass acts as a projected display to go over things like presentation notes or research findings.
There's also a "party car" mode, something like a rolling pregame ahead of a night out with synchronized dance and music and, yes, plenty of adult beverages—theoretically legal since nobody will be driving.





