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Carsales Staff27 Feb 2016
NEWS

GENEVA MOTOR SHOW: Toyota's new baby SUV

Toyota's all-new C-HR compact SUV emerges mostly faithful to the edgy concept that previewed it

First images of the production version of Toyota's all-new compact SUV, the C-HR, have hit the internet ahead of its world debut at the Geneva motor show on March 1.

The road-ready C-HR – the nameplate the small crossover will carry into showrooms – appears very similar to the adventurously styled concept car that debuted at last September's Frankfurt show.

However, while many of the coupe-like concept's sharply sculpted body surfaces and overall proportions continue into production, the customer car is much lower to the ground and is far less sleek, featuring a higher roofline, flatter body sides, larger side windows and longer rear doors.

So far no details have been announced, but Toyota has previously said its all-new sub-RAV4 model – which rival the likes of the Mazda CX-3 and Nissan JUKE – will be based on the same new  its TNGA platform that underpins the new Prius.

As you can see here, the C-HR to be shown at Geneva will be a hybrid and is likely to share its petrol-electric powertrain with the latest Prius, which arrives Down Under in March.

Whether that version becomes available in Australia remains to be seen, and it remains unclear where our C-HR will be produced.

If production only takes place in Europe, Toyota Australia may struggle to land it at a competitive price, which would need to open at about $20,000. When local production of the Camry and Aurion ceases next year, all Toyota models will come from either Japan, Thailand or -- in the case of the Kluger -- the US.

Naturally, however, Toyota Australia is keen to join this country's booming small SUV sector.

“The stunning looks, compact packaging and outstanding agility inherent in the C-HR Concept mean the production car is definitely on our wish-list for Australia,” said sales and marketing chief Tony Cramb last year.

“Given the right specification, pricing and availability for our market, we would expect the C-HR production model to accelerate the already-hot demand for vehicles in the small SUV segment.

“Toyota is obviously keen to compete in what is the fastest-growing category across the entire Australian market, with sales up more than 30 per cent so far this year.”

Tags

Toyota
Car News
SUV
Family Cars
Motor Shows
Geneva Motor Show
Written byCarsales Staff
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