The year is 2077. America’s coastal cities are half-submerged, corporations have replaced governments, and somewhere in the neon-drenched streets, this monstrous Lincoln Continental slices through the perpetual rain like a phantom blade. At least, that’s the world this concept car seems built for. This brutalist reimagining strips away decades of increasingly forgettable Lincoln design language and replaces it with something that looks like it rolled straight out of Night City.
“Machine built for power brokers, corporate diplomats, and underworld kings” reads the designer Radek Štěpán’s brief, acknowledging the Continental’s somewhat murky history as the preferred transportation for both legitimate power and its shadowy counterpart. The Continental, after all, was the car in which JFK was assassinated, the ride of choice for fictional mob boss Don Corleone, and a staple in countless gangster films. This concept doesn’t run from that complicated legacy; it leans into it with a menacing grin and blacked-out windows.
Designer: Radek Štěpán
Hovering mere inches from the ground, the body of the LNCLN Continental concept creates an illusion of impossible physics, as if gravity itself bends to the will of whoever commands this vehicle. The massive wheels tuck into geometric wheel wells that look like they were cut with a laser, while the proportions are deliberately exaggerated, with a long hood, truncated rear, and a greenhouse that looks like it could withstand small arms fire. The visual weight distribution creates tension, making the car look fast even when standing still, like a sprinter in the blocks waiting for the gun.
Origami-like body panels fold and intersect with mathematical precision, referencing the clean, straight lines of the iconic 1960s Continental while pushing them to their logical extreme. Every surface is planar and deliberate, creating a faceted shell that catches light in dramatic ways. The giant “CONTINENTAL” typography spanning the sides isn’t subtle, but subtlety isn’t what this car is about. It’s a declaration, a statement of identity that turns the vehicle into a rolling logo. The designer has cleverly reduced the Lincoln branding to a minimalist “LNCLN” at the rear, as if in this future, vowels are an unnecessary luxury.
Thin slashes of light cut through the darkness where this vehicle roams, with precise LED strips providing just enough illumination without breaking the monolithic surfaces. There are no fake vents, no decorative chrome, no superfluous styling elements. Everything serves the brutalist aesthetic, creating a vehicle that communicates power through minimalism rather than ornamentation. The black wheel covers with their white “MONOLITH” branding complete the look, suggesting this car doesn’t even need to show off its brake calipers or suspension components.
Back in the 1960s, when the Continental was in its prime, American luxury meant something distinct from European sensibilities. It wasn’t about handling Nürburgring corners or hand-stitched dashboard leather; it was about presence, authority, and unapologetic scale. This concept recaptures that distinctly American luxury attitude and catapults it into a speculative future. If Lincoln ever wants to recapture its former glory, this is the kind of bold thinking it needs, a design that acknowledges its heritage while refusing to be trapped by it. Until then, I’ll be dreaming about this cyberpunk Continental showing up in the next season of a prestige HBO drama, carrying some terrifying corporate overlord to their next hostile takeover.
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