Skip to main content

Lexus builds a driveable “Origami Car” made of precision-cut cardboard

Lexus has been on a roll lately with extra-curricular activities like its hoverboard. The Japanese automaker has now decided to turn its attention to what it calls the “Origami Car.”

Modeled after the IS sedan, Lexus designed and built a perfect replica of the model made entirely from precision-cut cardboard. From the smallest interior details to its functioning doors, headlights, and rolling wheels, the Origami Car is totally unique.

Recommended Videos

Perhaps I shouldn’t say it’s made completely of cardboard, because its body is mounted on a steel and aluminum frame and is powered by an electric motor. That means you can actually drive the vehicle. Lexus partnered with LaserCut Works and Scales and Models, a London-based business that specializes in prototypes, architectural models and bespoke commissions to bring the Origami Car to life.

Lexus - Making the Origami Inspired Car

Based on a digital 3D model of the IS, the engineers divided the project into a series of steps that were then digitally rendered in 10-mm “slices.” This allowed the team to provide the two-dimensional profiles needed to laser cut each of the 1,700 sheets of 10-mm thick cardboard. Holding the vehicle together is the work of a water-based wood glue.

“This was a very demanding job, with five people involved in the digital design, modelling, laser cutting and assembly,” said Ruben Marcos, Scales and Models company founder and director. “Just like Lexus, we were committed to producing the best possible quality.” Lexus reported that it took the development team three months to complete the project.

Considering the scope of Lexus’s last few projects, from a futuristic toy to a tree-based vehicle, it’s worth wondering what the Japanese brand has next in the pipeline. Whatever it may be, don’t expect your own Lexus to hover or be manufactured from laser-cut cardboard anytime soon.

Miles Branman
Miles Branman developed a passion for cars early on thanks to a neighbor’s collection of rare and exotic vehicles. What…
7 incredible shows like Black Mirror to stream next
Watch these science fiction series next
Paul Giamatti in Black Mirror

Black Mirror started its life as a niche science fiction anthology show on Netflix, but the British series expanded its reach and popularity as the episodes started to blend into contemporary world issues more and more. It's no secret that the world we live in keeps getting scarier, whether that be due to the upheaval in politics or the uncertainty of artificial intelligence and climate change altering our world forever. Good TV's ability to mirror real life makes it culturally relevant, and it leaves fans craving even more of it.

With fans waiting patiently to find out if Black Mirror season 8 will be greenlit at Netflix, there are several alternatives that you can check out after finishing season 7. Not all of these series are as daring about social issues or crafted in the same way as Black Mirror, but all of them have the same sci-fi principles that make the storytelling unique. These are the best shows like Black Mirror to stream next.

Read more
One of the newest movies on Netflix is from an action movie master
Havoc is the ideal movie for anyone hankering for more John Wick.
Tom Hardy in Havoc

Not every movie on Netflix is worth your time, but the streaming service definitely makes plenty of movies that are worth seeking out. Havoc, which hit the streamer on Friday, is one such movie, and part of the reason it's worth seeking out is the extraordinary talent both in front of and behind the camera.

Directed by Gareth Edwards, the movie follows a detective who must track down a politician's son in the aftermath of a drug deal gone wrong. As he climbs deeper and deeper into the criminal underworld, he begins to appreciate just how much corruption he's facing and kills a lot of people along the way.

Read more
A Miami Vice remake is coming from the director of Top Gun: Maverick
Kosinski will next direct F1 with Brad Pitt
Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas in Miami Vice.

Miami Vice is coming back to the big screen. Almost 20 years after Michael Mann adapted the '80s series to the big screen, Joseph Kosinski is set to direct a new adaptation of the film. Universal Pictures will produce the film, which is being adapted by Dan Gilroy.

Plot details for the movie are not yet available, but the original series follows a pair of detectives who work undercover in South Florida. Mann was involved in both the original series and the first theatrical adaptation, which starred Colin Farrell and Jamie Foxx. That movie was a box office bomb and received mixed reviews at the time, but has since become something of a cult film in certain circles.

Read more