For the modern nomad, the line between transportation and living space has always been fluid, but Kia’s PV5 WKNDR Concept obliterates it entirely. Winning the Red Dot’s ‘Best of the Best’ award isn’t just about aesthetics; it’s a nod to how well this thing understands its audience. This isn’t another van trying to be all things to all people. It’s a precision tool for those who want to haul their life with them, whether that means bikes, laptops, or a full camping kitchen, without the usual compromises in comfort or efficiency.
Kia’s PBV platform has always leaned into practicality, but the WKNDR takes it further by wrapping that utility in a design that’s both striking and functional. The target user here is obvious: urban professionals who want to disappear into the wilderness on Friday afternoon, digital nomads who need a mobile office with a view, and outdoor enthusiasts tired of sacrificing space for capability. The real test, though, is whether this concept can escape the show floor and survive the brutal transition to production. Because right now, it’s making a lot of promises, and the auto industry has a habit of breaking those.
Designer: KIA Design Team
The exterior design balances ruggedness with a futuristic edge, avoiding the cliché of looking like a rolling toolbox. The boxy shape and lifted stance scream capability, while the minimalist front end and integrated lighting keep it from feeling like a relic of the past. Then there are the hydro turbine wheels and solar panels, features that sound like they’re ripped from a cyberpunk novel. Kia claims these can recharge the battery using kinetic energy and sunlight, which, if true, would be a massive win for off-grid adventurers. The “gear head,” that external storage pod, is the kind of innovation that makes you wonder why no one thought of it sooner. It keeps bulky equipment outside but protected, freeing up interior space for the things that matter, like a proper bed or a workspace.
Step inside, and the WKNDR feels like a cross between a high-end tiny home and a modular workspace. The rail system lets users reconfigure the interior in minutes, swapping between sleeping quarters, a dining area, or a gear storage hub. The materials are durable yet refined, with a color palette that manages to be both calming and energizing. Kia’s designers clearly thought about real-world use cases, not just how it would photograph for a press kit. Even the ceiling is utilized for storage, and the inclusion of an onboard compressor for tires or inflatable gear is the kind of detail that separates a well-thought-out design from a half-baked one.
Power specs are still vague, but the WKNDR is built on Kia’s E-GMP platform, which currently powers vehicles like the EV6 and EV9. That suggests a dual-motor, all-wheel-drive setup with a battery pack good for at least 300 miles of range, though real-world conditions and off-road tires will likely shave some of that off. The wild card is how much the hydro turbines and solar panels can extend that range. If they can add even a modest boost, say 10 to 15 percent, during a weekend trip, that’s a serious advantage over traditional EVs that still leave drivers sweating over charge levels in remote areas.
The WKNDR’s greatest asset might also be its biggest liability. Concepts are famous for dazzling on paper while collapsing under the weight of real-world constraints. The gear head, rail system, and hydro turbines are brilliant ideas, but they’ll need to prove themselves outside the controlled environment of an auto show. If Kia can pull it off, they’ll have a vehicle that redefines the adventure van segment. If not, it’ll join the graveyard of concepts that looked incredible in renderings but never made it to production. Either way, it’s pushing the industry in the right direction, and that’s something worth paying attention to.
For now, the WKNDR offers a tantalizing vision of what’s possible when a vehicle is designed around how people actually live, not just how they drive. It’s a statement that the next wave of adventure vehicles won’t just get you to your destination. They’ll let you stay there, comfortably and sustainably, without feeling like you’ve left civilization behind. Whether it ever hits the road in this form remains to be seen, but it’s a conversation starter, and that’s exactly what the industry needs.
The post Forget Your SUV: Kia’s PV5 WKNDR is the Ultimate Weekend Escape Pod first appeared on Yanko Design.