Nissan Extrem SUV concept (2012) first official pictures
First Official Pictures
23 October 2012 09:01
Nissan is looking to bring a splash of colour and outlandish
design to Brazil's streets with their latest creation: the Extrem SUV
concept. It's an eye-grabbing response to the 'more affordable locally
produced vehicles, which tend to be conservative in design, colour and
specification', according to company Senior Vice President Shiro
Nakamura.
What niche does the Nissan Extrem fall into?
If the love-it-or-hate-it Nissan Juke
is the marque's jacked-up supermini crossover, the Extrem is the
rakish, sportier version of that: a sort of X6 to the Juke's X5, if you
will. The Extrem has a two-door bodystyle and a heavily raked
glasshouse, and inside it's set up like a sports car too, thanks to the
2+2 seating arrangement.
It's certainly another bullish-looking Nissan design in the Juke
mould, which is exactly what the team behind it were after. Nissan's
designers nicknamed the Extrem 'The Baby Beast', admitting the look they
wanted was close to a road-going rally car, with a butch stance and
muscular surfacing. Spot the gills behind the front wheels that look
like exaggerated GT-R vents and you'll see what they're on about.
Brazil has played a part too: Nissan wants the Extrem to reflect the
diversity and flamboyance of the country - appropriate, since the Extrem
makes its debut at this week's Sao Paulo motor show. Much of the design
was based in Sao Paulo, while the metallic orange paint is said to
reference Brazilian nature. The patterns atop the roof are a hat tip to
what Nissan calls 'iconic Brazilian graphics'.
Are there any fantasy concept car touches?
As much as we'd like them to, it'd doubtful the see-through A-pillars
will feature in production Nissans; ditto the hidden door handles
fitted flush with the body.
Unlike the hydrogen Nissan Terra concept we saw in Paris last month,
there isn't a 22nd century powertrain under the bonnet. Nissan have
touted that a production Extrem would share drivetrain components with
the Juke, though most likely the sportier engines, in the same way that
Mini doesn't offer its more spritely Coupe and Roadster models in
anything less than Cooper spec.
So, a 1.6-litre turbocharged Extrem with either two or part-time
four-wheel drive isn't too far a stretch to imagine, even if Nissan
states the Extrem is just a design study to gauge reaction at the
moment. Given that the Juke-R Nissan crafted purely as a stunt eventually got a factory run (at £400,000 a pop) we wouldn't be too convinced of Nissan's word that the Extrem is 'only a concept'.
Why the Brazilian influence?
The world's eyes will be turning to Brazil in the next few years for
the FIFA World Cup and Olympics, but the volume car makers are already
setting about a foothold in the country, thanks to its booming economy
and demand for new vehicles. Nissan wants to introduce eight new models
into Brazil by 2016, and gain a 5% market share two years earlier than
that.
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