New York City's 'real' Taxi of Tomorrow
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Some New York City cab companies want to turn back the clock on the Taxi of Tomorrow and send it back to the drawing board.
Several fleet operators have filed a lawsuit against the city over a rule that will force them to use the all-new Nissan NV200-based cab starting next year.
The plaintiffs say restricting their choices to one vehicle is unprecedented, and they deride the “untested” Nissan “outdated engineering, the fact that it doesn’t offer a hybrid option, and that replacement parts for the Mexican-made minivan will have to be supplied from outside the United States.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Too bad for them they can’t just travel through time and pick a different car.
Or can’t they?
A team of designers have a possible solution for the cabbies’ conundrum, turning the time-traveling DeLorean from the movie “Back to the Future” into a New York City taxi.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Michael Lubrano and Kimberly Yau have outfitted the iconic sports car with all of the accoutrements a hack needs, including an official NYC Taxi paint job, On/Off Duty light and a set of black steel wheels.
Compared to the Nissan, the DeLorean’s passenger carrying capabilities are well-established. Sure, it can only hold one, but how many Ford Crown Vic’s have safely delivered fares to the Old West?
The durability of the remaining DeLoreans seems up to snuff -- they were first built in the early 1980’s -- and the rights to build official replacement parts are currently held by a company based in Texas, which is about as made in the USA as they come.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}As far has the hybrid requirement is concerned, two words: flux capacitor.
Unfortunately, the creation is as phony as those unlicensed cabbies that try to pick you up at the airport. It was an entry in a promotional competition sponsored by Nooka, a fashion house that specializes in 1980’s-inspired futuristic designs. Lubrano and Yau simply took photos of a toy version of the car and gave it a digital, yet very convincing custom job.
Oddly, while they were created in 2010, the images have gone viral it the past few weeks, just in time for this new cab controversy.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Who says time travel isn’t possible?