BMW Concept Active Tourer breaks new ground

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Neil Dowling

Contributing Journalist

2 min read

Based on the 1-Series – and essentially a 1-Series GT – the concept car to be unveiled at Paris motor show is the first front-wheel drive vehicle with a BMW badge. The rounded, family-oriented hatchback concept is the precursor to a range of BMW compact hatchbacks, SUVs and coupes that sit on a new platform to be shared with the Mini.

BMW claims the Tourer - which takes on the Mercedes-Benz B-Class as well as a raft of SUVs - is its first premium compact vehicle to combine comfort and space functionality with dynamic performance and style.

It's not just its front-wheel drive design - overturning decades of rear-wheel drive models and the company's staunch mandate for the layout - that will make the Tourer stand out. The concept is to be shown as a plug-in hybrid and using the same drivetrain as the upcoming i8 coupe hybrid.

"The eDrive concept familiar from the BMW i8 is used here for the first time in a model of the core BMW brand and will in future be the designation for all electric and plug-in hybrid drives,'' BMW's head office says in a statement. "It covers all components of the electric drive, the electric motor developed by BMW, the lithium-ion battery and the intelligent engine control unit.''

Like the i8, the Tourer gets a three-cylinder 1.5-litre turbo-petrol engine - half a 3-litre six-cylinder unit - that acts as a power unit and generator for the onboard lithium-ion batteries. But it also has plug-in capability which means these batteries can be charged up when the car is parked.

It has an electric-only range of about 30km when fully charged. BMW claims the Tourer accelerates to 100km/h in less than eight seconds and has a theoretical (in Australia) top speed of 200km/h.

The average fuel consumption is less than 2.5 litres/100km and CO2 emissions are less than 60g/km. BMW estimates that annual growth rates of up to 5 per cent are expected in the small car and compact segment of the premium class in the near future.

"For this reason, the BMW Concept Active Tourer is a key component in the ongoing development of the BMW brand and its model portfolio,'' it says. ``As a plug-in hybrid, the BMW Concept Active Tourer also provides a glimpse ahead to future drive variants in automobiles of the compact class.''
 

Photo of Neil Dowling
Neil Dowling

Contributing Journalist

GoAutoMedia Cars have been the corner stone to Neil’s passion, beginning at pre-school age, through school but then pushed sideways while he studied accounting. It was rekindled when he started contributing to magazines including Bushdriver and then when he started a motoring section in Perth’s The Western Mail. He was then appointed as a finance writer for the evening Daily News, supplemented by writing its motoring column. He moved to The Sunday Times as finance editor and after a nine-year term, finally drove back into motoring when in 1998 he was asked to rebrand and restyle the newspaper’s motoring section, expanding it over 12 years from a two-page section to a 36-page lift-out. In 2010 he was selected to join News Ltd’s national motoring group Carsguide and covered national and international events, launches, news conferences and Car of the Year awards until November 2014 when he moved into freelancing, working for GoAuto, The West Australian, Western 4WDriver magazine, Bauer Media and as an online content writer for one of Australia’s biggest car groups. He has involved himself in all aspects including motorsport where he has competed in everything from motocross to motorkhanas and rallies including Targa West and the ARC Forest Rally. He loves all facets of the car industry, from design, manufacture, testing, marketing and even business structures and believes cars are one of the few high-volume consumables to combine a very high degree of engineering enlivened with an even higher degree of emotion from its consumers.
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