Meet the Vision Iconic — a dramatic concept that fuses the Stuttgart marque’s past and future into a single, striking silhouette. It wears a long, elegant bonnet that channels the Art Deco glamour of the 1930s, then pivots to a sculpted rear that tips its hat to the 1954 300 SL. The result feels both classic and futuristic: familiar proportions reimagined with modern bravado.
From the front, the car announces itself with an illuminated grille that stretches across the nose and culminates in a glowing three-pointed star mounted at the bonnet’s tip. Slim, tri-segment headlights flank the crest, echoing details from the brand’s latest electrified models while maintaining an unmistakable identity. Inside the light show, a deep gloss-black finish emphasizes every carved surface, making reflections part of the design language. But the Vision Iconic isn’t just theatre. Its outer skin carries experimental solar modules applied as a wafer-thin coating. Engineers say 11 square metres of that surface — about the exterior area of a mid-size SUV — could, under ideal conditions, generate enough energy to support roughly 12,000 km of driving a year. The paint-like layer reportedly contains no rare-earth metals or silicone and was developed with recyclability in mind, turning the body into an energy-harvesting sculptural element.
Step inside and the concept shifts into a new dimension of luxury. A full-width glass dashboard awakens as doors open, animating in an analogue-inspired sequence that nods to high-end chronographs. At the centre sits a clock fashioned in the marque’s emblematic shape, hiding an AI companion that blends tradition with digital assistance.
The steering wheel is a nostalgic four-spoke design; metallic, polished brass door handles and mother-of-pearl with silver-gold tones lift the cabin into jewellery-like territory. Up front, a wide, sumptuous bench seat upholstered in deep-blue velvet suggests relaxed, first-class comfort, while sculpted rear space promises practicality beneath the theatrical surfaces. This concept also explores automation.
While powertrain specifics are withheld, the car is being studied for advanced driving systems. The manufacturer is investigating what it would take to ready a model like this for Level 4 highly automated driving, though the showpiece currently demonstrates enhanced Level 2 point-to-point urban capabilities. Those systems claim to interpret complex city traffic, managing steering and acceleration to help navigate congested streets in the world’s largest cities. The Vision Iconic reads as both manifesto and mood board. It’s a reminder that heritage can be a springboard rather than a straightjacket — classic proportions reframed with digital lighting, renewable coatings and a cockpit that merges analogue tactility with software intelligence. The design chief calls it the pure essence of the marque: an attempt to distil prestige, value and grace into one bold statement. For those less drawn to concept showmanship and more interested in buying, new models remain on sale: a compact A-Class can be found for roughly €35,100, while a new GLC sits at about €58,500.
The Iconic itself is a one-off exploration, but many of its cues — illuminated branding, advanced materials and a richer blend of analogue and digital interfaces — point to what could filter into production cars in the coming years. Ultimately, the Vision Iconic is a high-wire act between nostalgia and innovation. It doesn’t simply reproduce the past; it reinterprets it, asking how a storied name can be unmistakable even as it embraces the future.