1media/1956_Pontiac_Club_de_Mer_safety_harness-thumb.jpgmedia/Pontiac_02.jpg2020-07-27T12:27:50-07:00Anne-Marie Maxwell326ac6eff123bb3f77fb517c66299be8b435b479375144plain2020-08-10T15:31:06-07:00Anne-Marie Maxwell326ac6eff123bb3f77fb517c66299be8b435b479At a time when seatbelts came as optional accessories on most cars, the Club de Mer’s sales brochure boasted “safety harnesses” as a standard feature. Both the presence of the seatbelts and the marketing angle taken by Pontiac in promoting them reveal how extensively the aviation aesthetic permeated automobile design at this time. With its bubble-like windshield, exaggerated rear fin, and transmission controls located between the two seats, the Club de Mer appears to have taken design cues from a rival concept car, the 1955 Lincoln Futura.
1media/1956_Plymouth_Belvedere-thumb.jpgmedia/Buick_background.jpgmedia/Chevrolet_02.jpg2020-06-18T15:04:50-07:00Anne-Marie Maxwell326ac6eff123bb3f77fb517c66299be8b435b479Cars by YearCurtis Fletcher36visual_path2020-08-21T11:55:08-07:00Curtis Fletcher3225f3b99ebb95ebd811595627293f68f680673e
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1media/Pontiac_02_thumb.jpg2020-07-27T12:09:03-07:001956 Pontiac Club de Mer1media/Pontiac_02.jpgplain2020-07-27T12:09:03-07:00Pontiac, 1956Pontiac "Club de Mer"