Compact Crossovers are on the Rise
Are They Our Answer to Europe's Small Hatchbacks?
SOURCE:
ALAIN JAPAN
Americans don't buy hatchbacks
(except for Minis), and Europeans don't understand why not. Western Europe's
most popular model is the Volkswagen Golf, with hatchback versions of the Ford
Focus, Opel Astra, and Renault Megan among best-sellers. Meanwhile, in the
U.S. auto market, the compact crossover/utility vehicle is emerging as midsize
family-sedan alternative. "When they're looking for a car, they start in either the
C/D-segment (midsize) or in the compact utilities segment," says Samantha
Hoyt, marketing manager for the new Ford Fusion. "We're calling this the super segment, because people cross-shop these so much. It'll be Camry-Escape,
Camry-Fusion, Escape-Accord, that whole CR-V-Escape, they're all shopping each
other."
The
segment has been around for a long time, with the Honda CR-V, Toyota RAV4, and
Ford Escape the dominant models. Bigger families looking for minivan
alternatives need three-row crossovers like the Honda Pilot and Chevy Traverse.
But the success of the latest Chevy Equinox, for one, has put more attention on
the compact CUV. Meanwhile, as it tries to clear dealer lots to make room for
its all-new '13 Escape, converged with the European Kuga, Ford has been selling
boatloads of the old model. Through last November, it sold 228,719 Escapes to
226,445 Fusions (11-month Focus sales totaled 161,436, a combo of '11 and '12
models). Is the compact CUV becoming our answer to Europe's compact
hatchbacks? While suggested retail prices of the Escape, CR-V, RAV4, and
Equinox are higher than their midsize sedan counterparts, like the European
hatchbacks, they offer the kind of flexibility for cargo space the sedans
cannot match, and FWD versions generally outsell the more-expensive, less
fuel-efficient AWD-equipped CUVs. In our new age of frugality and tight credit,
American consumers are finding the same kind of one-vehicle-does-all economy in
a CUV that Europeans find in a four-door hatchback. The VW Golf remains Europe's most popular model, with 413,156 sold
through October, one month short of the figures above. As these specs show,
however, the compact CUV is still large American economy sized next to a
compact Euro hatchback.
2013 Ford Escape
|
2012 Volkswagen Golf
|
|
Wheelbase
|
105.9 in
|
101.5 in
|
LxWxH
|
178.1 x 72.4 x 66.3 in
|
165.4 x 70.3 x 58.2 in
|
Pass vol
|
98.1 cu ft
|
92.9 cu ft
|
Cargo vol
|
34.3 cu ft*
|
15.2 cu ft*
|
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