Copyright © 2026 Motivate Media Group. All rights reserved.
Aston Martin’s ‘003’ hypercar has been confirmed.
The famed British motorcar company has just taken its next step into the mid-engined hypercar market with the confirmed release of the first official details of Project ‘003’.
Project ‘003’ is the third hypercar to be developed by Aston Martin following the Aston Martin Valkyrie and Valkyrie AMR Pro (formerly ‘001’ and ‘002’), 003 has its DNA deeply rooted in concepts and technology currently being developed for those revolutionary road and track-only machines.
Project ‘003’ will be built around a lightweight structure and powered by a turbocharged petrol-electric hybrid engine. Combined with active aerodynamics for outstanding levels of downforce in a road-legal car, active suspension systems providing next-level precision, control and driver connection like the Aston Martin Valkyrie and Valkyrie AMR Pro, Project ‘003’ will possess class leading dynamics on both road and track.
This cliffside West Coast residence is a thoughtfully layered response to a practical, mid-century-inspired architectural framework, shaped to reflect the lives and values of the people who call it home
West One transforms a villa in Jumeirah Golf Estates that maximises its view of the sunset
Interiors UAE highlights the beauty of materiality and craft by creating furniture that stands the test of time
Tropical Modernism up close
We honor these product designers as part of the id50.
Here are the debuts of the id50 2026.
Take a look at the visionaries from our id50 2026
Meet the global firms with local presence that form a part of this year's id50
Sleek and clean, the Minimalistic series applies restraint in its design.
This year, we celebrate the interior designers, architects and product designers from the region – from emerging talent to the visionaries and global firms with local presence. We uncover their latest projects and what drew them to the profession.
Read identity magazine's July-August 2026 edition on ISSUU or grab your copy
The German kitchen studio discusses why restraint, not statement, is the harder thing to achieve and what that means for the architects and designers it works with.