Mercedes-Benz has revealed the Vision Iconic, a show car that signals the brand’s next design phase while previewing technologies aimed at the electric and digital era.
The concept reinterprets one of the marque’s most recognisable cues — the chrome radiator grille — into a “digital status front” framed in chrome, backed by smoked glass and contour lighting, and topped by an illuminated upright bonnet star.
Slim headlamps and a deep black, high-gloss finish complete the exterior.
“Vision Iconic embodies our vision for the future of mobility… with neuromorphic computing, steer-by-wire, solar paint, and Level 4 highly automated driving,” said Mercedes-Benz Group AG chief technology officer Markus Schäfer.
Chief design officer Gorden Wagener added that the car references 1930s Art Deco forms, evoking the 300 SL with “sculptural flowing lines.”
Inside, the brand pitches a lounge-like, “hyper-analogue” experience tailored to automated driving.
A continuous front bench in deep blue velvet faces a sculptural floating glass instrument cluster dubbed “Zeppelin,” which mixes mechanical watch-style animations with a pillar-to-pillar display.
Materials include mother-of-pearl-look inlays, brass-toned hardware and straw marquetry flooring rendered in an Art Deco fan motif. A four-spoke wheel houses a floating Mercedes-Benz emblem within a glass sphere.
The technology brief highlights three strands: energy harvesting, computing efficiency and automated driving readiness.
Mercedes-Benz says it is researching a wafer-thin photovoltaic coating (“solar paint”) that can be applied to body panels without rare earths or silicon and is recyclable.
Under ideal conditions, an 11 m² surface—roughly a mid-size SUV’s footprint—could generate energy equivalent to as much as 12,000 km of driving per year, depending on geography and use.
For processing power, the company is exploring neuromorphic computing architectures that mimic the brain’s networks to cut latency and energy draw for perception tasks.
It claims potential tenfold efficiency gains for functions such as traffic-sign and lane recognition, with up to a 90% reduction in energy needs for autonomous-driving data processing compared with current systems.
On the road, Vision Iconic is presented with enhanced Level 2 urban assistance and is “prepared” for Level 4 highly automated driving on motorways, where occupants could recline or stream media.
A high-automation parking function is envisaged to operate without dedicated infrastructure.
Steer-by-wire pairs with rear-axle steering to ease low-speed manoeuvres and free up interior design options by removing a mechanical steering link.
Extending the concept beyond the car, Mercedes-Benz has created a six-piece capsule fashion collection for men and women that translates the show car’s themes into apparel.




















