Quite an extreme and unexpected leak. The F15 was one thing in January 2013, but this takes the cake. I wonder if this moves up the launch timetable from IAA 2015 to Geneva 2015? I have never seen anything like this, outside of the W221 leak in December 2002 and D4 A8 leak in 2008.
Everything isn't always as it seems though. I would wait until a full unveiling, which just might be moved up from IAA 2015. I texted these to my mum (F02 760Li owner) and she likes it, but feels it's too conservative after nearly 7 years. The X360 XJ will look much better than this in my opinion.
That will certainly start to affect the 7er at least 2 years into its life-cycle and correct the mistakes of the X351. I'm not surprised anyway, from the June 2012 description I heard from a BMW design clinic of the G12. Lack of enthusiasm for the exterior, but mainly for the interior.
Final design sign-off was around the summer of 2012 (as per Busty), so clearly that is what the individual saw. The final product. No wonder the F01 LCi of 2012 (MY2013) was so minimal. What is Adrian van Hooydonk doing is my question? Failing his predecessor and repeating past mistakes?
The current F01 design was reached in the summer of 2005 and finalised by Q1 2006, so definitely under van Hooydonk as BMW brand design director and Bangle as BMW Group (BMW, Mini, RR, Motorrad) director. The last BMW designed with Bangle there, was partially the F30. F30 design selection on March 2, 2009 was just one month after Bangle left and final prod. freeze months later.
The only 7-Series designed with Bangle fully at the helm was the E65 in 1998 (Jan. 1999 sign-off) via van Hooydonk's own pen and maybe the E38 LCi for late 1998 (1996/early '97 sign-off) and E38 LCi II for MY2001 (04/2000-12/2001) signed off in early 1999. The E38 (1991 styling work) was fully signed-off before Bangle arrived at BMW in October 1992 and not even Bangle's predecessor (Claus Luthe, left in April 1990) was present when that happened.
Does BMW need a true change in design leadership? Karim Habib might've became BMW Brand design director too late, as by the time he got there, lazy van Hooydonk already approved this G11. I like Habib's ideas for BMW. Back in the '90s, automotive media chastised BMW for the "dowdy" E36 3-Series in 1990, the predictable E38 7er in 1994, also predictable E39 5er in late 1995, and with extreme annoyance, the E46 in March 1998 at Geneva. From 1997 (after Deep Blue: August 1996-February 1997), BMW was already embarking on a design revolution, that would be fully developed by mid-late 1998 via the E65 7-Series and GINA (inspired Fisker's E85 Z4 in 1999).
Chris Bangle did not direct E39 design development (summer 1992 selection), but was present for its final production-styling sign-off circa early 1993. Both that and the Z3 were "in the oven" when he arrived at BMW. He did actually design, with Erik Goplen, the production E46 saloon into 1995 and was present for its January 1996 final sign-off. My point is, he was able to do both conservative and striking. What really gives here?
Is the "i" brand the only one of concern now and everything is forever evolutionary in appearance/styling? I hope BMW isn't going try and revolutionize everything with the next 3-Series. If so, they still haven't learned that top-down is most essential. Not just in technology, but also family styling. Lexus is might've made that mistake with their next LS, due in 2016 and added a newer version of their spindle grille, instead of an actually new direction.