Sometimes, luxury isn’t about having more – it’s about having less,  albeit artfully architected. Just ask BMW, which lops off a heaping  helping of headroom and cargo space to turn its well-conceived X5 into  the costlier, less utile X6. Admittedly, the X6 isn’t particularly  artful, but its rival, the Land Rover Range Rover Sport is. Both  vehicles are more indulgent – and more costly – despite offering  reduced lebensraum and less exotic mechanicals.
Perhaps the originator and best practitioner of this less-is-more  movement is Mercedes-Benz, whose designers adroitly took the  last-generation E-Class, lopped off gobs of headroom and trunk space,  added some CLS badges, and then proceeded to give the four-seater a much  larger price tag. Given that luxury and practicality are nearly polar  opposites, perhaps this trend shouldn’t be that surprising. The ability  to fritter away utility in favor of fashion is arguably the ultimate  statement of luxury (“We could be rational, but why be so sensible,  dahling?”).
Of course, we needn’t be so cynical – especially when the end result  from Mercedes is so striking. The 2006 CLS wasn’t simply a Stuttgart  cut-and-shut job – any fool with a pair of working eyes could see that  Benz had developed a voluptuous creature that looked downright  otherworldly compared to the stodgy E-Class that sired it. Mercedes  would go so far as to market the original CLS as a ‘four-door coupe,’  and while pedants broke out in hives upon hearing the term, the reality  was that Benz had created something far sexier than an ordinary sedan.  The CLS’ sleekly beveled form wasn’t for everyone, but it sparked a rash  of imitators in nearly every segment of the industry, from fellow  luxury players to workaday sedans. Clearly, Mercedes had no small job  when it came to reinventing its style icon.
Mercedes-Benz CLS63 AMG 





 
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