1st January 2000
CITROËN'S FAMILY CAR OF THE FUTURE AT THE BRISBANE MOTOR
SHOW
The family car of the future will be on display
at the 2000 Brisbane International Motor Show (4-13 February 2000) in the
unique shape of the Citroën Xsara Picasso, a car that has the interior
space of a traditional Australian wagon, but takes the up the road space of
just a small hatchback.
Due for launch in Australia later in the year,
the Citroën Xsara Picasso is the most advanced of a new class of car, the
mini-MPV, that provide outstanding interior space combined with a small
exterior, high tech engineering and a shape that is like nothing else on the
road.
The high tech engineering ranges from one of
the most fuel-efficient and cleanest engines in the world, to storage lockers
in the floor for the kid's toys and a rear hatch that adapts for short and tall
people. It even has a built in shopping trolley!
The Mini MPV class, although it has just three
members, will over take the big MPV class in Europe sales during the next 12
months with this new style of car set to become for the new millennium what the
4WD has been for the 1990s: The car to be seen in.
The Mini MPV, exemplified by the Xsara Picasso,
has achieved this by offering a unique combination: An exterior size and
footprint on the road little larger than a conventional medium hatchback, but,
thanks to the monospace, or single box design and added height, a level of
interior space that is unimaginable in a hatchback. Yet, it is as easy to drive
and maneuverable as a conventional car.
To this package Citroën adds the features
that would be expected of such an innovative and stylish marque.
It is based on the platform of the acclaimed
Citroën Xsara, which endows it with class-leading ride quality, handling
and roadholding. Its unique exterior styling that sets it apart in an already
innovative class houses an interior that builds on an already spacious envelope
with space for five occupants and their luggage.
The Citroën Xsara Picasso will go on sale
in Australia at the end of 2000 with prices expected to start from just over
$30,000. Full pricing and Australian specifications will be announced when the
Xsara Picasso goes on sale.
Citroën Xsara Picasso: Innovation
in vehicle design
Unveiled at the 1998 Paris Motor Show, the
Citroën Xsara Picasso owes its exterior and interior styling to the
Citroën Creative Styling Centre. Reflecting new concepts in style,
ergonomics and practicality the Xsara Picasso is spacious, user-friendly and
versatile.
A single-box vehicle with the continuous line
of the windscreen and bonnet, the Xsara
Citroën Xsara Picasso is a hatchback at
the rear with its raked rear window. The morphology of the vehicle is a first
in the world of automotive design. The dimensions of the Citroën Xsara
Picasso place it squarely in the family of compact vehicles, but the interior
is exceptionally user-friendly and spacious as a result of the vehicle's
astonishing proportions. Its overall length (4.27 metres) places it between the
Citroën Xsara and the Citroën Xantia, while its height (1.63 m)
places it between the Xantia and the Citroën Evasion people mover. The
width is 1.75 m.
With its interior space and generous wheelbase of
2.76 m, the Xsara Picasso offers five real seats (the three at the rear being
of identical size) and a vast boot of 515 litres or in other words, a load
capacity equivalent to that of an wagon in the Class above.
The range is based on a single level of trim
and three powerplants: two petrol (1.6i and 1.8i 16V) developing 65 kW and 85
kW respectively, and one diesel 2.0 Turbo Diesel Hdi developing 66
kW.
The name Xsara Picasso,
surprises and catches the imagination. One of the greatest artists of this
century, Citroën Xsara Picasso broke with accepted conventions to share
his personal vision of the world. It was therefore natural for an original and
inventive marque such as Citroën, a marque with a worldwide reputation as
an innovator, renowned for its ability to design cars with a difference, to
associate the name of Xsara Picasso with the first Citroën car of the
third millennium.
Responding to customer requirements, the
Citroën Xsara Picasso combines the versatile and modular practicality of
an all-purpose vehicle with the looks, safety, robust design and driving
pleasure of a saloon. The Xsara Picasso combines the qualities of several
automotive families. It can be compared to a saloon, a wagon, a
people-carrier and even a cabriolet when it is equipped with a large
sunroof extending back over the second row of seats.
The vehicle is designed to offer a living area
in which the well-being of all occupants is taken into account. The spacious
and modular interior, the three rear seats, the flat floor forming a walkway
and the generous stowage space illustrate Citroën's determination to make
life on board a pleasurable experience. The height of the driving position -
mid-way between a saloon and a people-carrier - is a major improvement. The
vehicle is designed to make everyday tasks easy. Moreover, the Xsara Picasso is
equipped with a wealth of features to make sure that children travel in comfort
and safety.
The vehicle is designed to combine driving
pleasure and comfort with a high level of safety. The multiplexed electrical
architecture offers a number of new functions including smart front and rear
windscreen wipers and automatic locking.
It also rationalises the electrical equipment
for increased reliability and simplifies repairability through improved
diagnostics.
The Xsara Picasso offers a generous level of
equipment for the safety and comfort of vehicle occupants. In terms of safety,
it is equipped as standard with twin front airbags (the passenger airbag can be
deactivated) and twin side airbags to protect the head and chest, front
seatbelts with force limiters and pyrotechnic pretensioners, ABS, a
transponder, and wide-field rearview mirrors among other
features.
In terms of comfort, the Xsara Picasso is
equipped with variable power steering, electric front windows with one-touch
control and an anti-nipping device on the driver's side, two electric,
defrosting rearview mirrors, central locking with HF control, an onboard
computer and height-adjustable driver's seat and steering wheel.
To meet
customer requirements, the Citroën Xsara Picasso provides generous stowage
space and focuses on a host of "minor" details that simplify everyday use: an
indicator on the instrument cluster to show whether the child safety lock has
been activated; warning signals to indicate a risk of black ice or inform the
driver that the key has been left in the ignition, the doors are open or that
he is over the speed limit; doors designed to open in three positions, an
indicator showing the distance to be covered before the next scheduled
maintenance operation, automatic locking if the driver forgets, a driver's
footrest, and a car radio with automatic volume adjustment and fingertip
controls.
The Xsara Picasso was developed within the
framework laid down by Citroën's Product Development Charter. The project
took 151 weeks and involved an investment of FF 1.9 billion of which FF 1
billion in development costs (design, quality, tests, prototypes, process
engineering).
The Xsara Picasso is scheduled to arrive on the
market at the end of 1999 in Europe and in Australia at the end of 2000. It
will be assembled at the Vigo plant in Spain.
 Click
here to visit the Xsara Picasso Picture
Collection
PLEASE NOTE: This is only a demonstration version of
the Citroen web site. Under normal circumstance you can download hi-res blow-up
images, but as the files are very large, they have not been included in this
version of the web site.
For further information please
e-Mail Miles Williams - General Manager on
100250.3324@compuserve.com
or use our Talk-to-Us button...
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