Autopedia

Dirk van Braeckel (born February 19th, 1958 in Deinze),[1] is a Belgian car designer, currently head of design at Bentley Motors.

Born in Deinze,[1] after leaving school, van Braeckel studied electrical engineering,[2] before joining Ford as an apprentice car designer in Cologne, West Germany.[1] Ford then agreed to sponsor him undertake a degree in car design at the Royal College of Art, London.[3]

On graduation, he joined Audi in 1984, working on external design.[1] In 1993, Volkswagen Group boss Ferdinand Piech personally choose him to head design for VW's newly purchased Škoda Auto division, where he revised the entire model line-up,[3] creating the Octavia and Fabia models.[1]

After VW purchased Bentley in 1998 from Vickers plc, Piech again made van Braeckel chief designer. His brief was to create a second-car line that could sell in higher volumes than the $240,000 Bentley Arnage limo. Van Braeckel created the Bentley Continental GT, which in 2004 sold 5,983 units, exceeding forecasts by 62%.[3]

In 2007, van Braeckel was awarded the laureate of Antwerp’s Christophe Plantin Prize, which honours Belgian citizens whose cultural, artistic or scientific activities contribute to the country’s prestige abroad.[2] In 2008, van Braeckel was awarded the European Automotive Design Award by Designers (Europe).[1]

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