Land Rover LRX Production Version to be Badged Range Rover - First Image Surfaces

2012 Range Rover design sketch - hi res

Land Rover promises LRX will have emissions below 150 g/km but offers few other details

By Alex Ricciuti
March 11, 2009 10:00 PM
Filed Under: Concept Car, European, Land Rover, Teasers

Here comes the baby Range Rover.

Or at least, that's Land Rover's marketing plan. So it has produced a vehicle that can carry the Range Rover badge and be sold as a luxury compact SUV.

The LRX is due for release in 2011 and will be built at Land Rover's Halewood plant in the UK, as it shares a platform with the Freelander, which is also assembled there.

The concept certainly has had appeal to the UK government, which will be providing 27 billion UK pounds to the British automaker to develop this (fairly) eco-friendly Range Rover.

Land Rover says the production version of the LRX will be very close to the image provided here, although some changes should be expected. It is promising emissions will be below the 150 g/km mark and that a hybrid version may be in the cards for the future but did not provide any details on drivetrains.

Land Rover has confirmed the model will be a 4-wheel drive, in keeping with the brand's identity.

 

Source: Land Rover

Press Release (Click to expand)

The UK Government has confirmed a grant offer of up to £27 million is to be made available to Land Rover for the production of an all-new car. The company is due to make a final decision on the the go-ahead of the project at its award-winning plant in Halewood, on Merseyside, later this year.

The car would be based on Land Rover's acclaimed LRX Concept vehicle, first shown at the Detroit Show last year, and would be the smallest, lightest and most efficient it has ever produced.

"We welcome the Government's support for this project, which would form a key part of our future product plans and which we very much want to put into production," said Phil Popham, Managing Director of Land Rover.

The grant offer will be made available under the Government's Grant for Business Investment scheme and is an important contribution towards the overall £400 million cost of the project. This is separate from the broader automotive support package currently being unveiled by the Government.

Although it still has to go through a number of approval gateways in the product development process before getting the final go-ahead, Land Rover has also confirmed that the new car would be a key addition to the Range Rover family of luxury vehicles.

Phil Popham said, "Our engineering feasibility study has shown that we can very successfully deliver Range Rover levels of quality, drivability and breadth of performance in a more compact, more sustainable, package. Feedback from the most extensive customer research we have ever undertaken also fully supports our belief that a production version of the LRX Concept would further raise the desirability of our brand and absolutely meet all those expectations."

"It would be the smallest, lightest and most efficient Range Rover that we've ever built," Phil added. "The compact size, lighter weight and sustainability-focused technologies of the LRX Concept showed how Land Rover is planning to respond to the needs of a changing world. Despite the current economic challenges, we remain committed to investing for the future, to continue to deliver relevant vehicles for our customers, with the outstanding breadth of capability for which we are world-renowned."

The new Range Rover would embrace excellent levels of refinement and all-round capability and also introduce new powertrain options, providing a major step forward in enabling the implementation of Land Rover's e-terrain technologies strategy and achievement of its goal to exceed a 20 per cent improvement in CO2 emissions.

"Both the design and size of the LRX Concept have generated a hugely positive reaction wherever it has been seen and we've also gathered fresh insights on what potential owners would look for in a production equivalent. That knowledge is now being applied to the process of refining the vehicle as it heads towards final approval," said Phil.

The Halewood facility employs 2000 people and is a recipient of the JD Power Gold Standard. It currently produces the Land Rover Freelander 2 and Jaguar X-TYPE.

Comments

dbehmoaras
March 11, 2009 10:05 PM
That looks sick. I would definitely take something like that with me to the Paris-Dakar rally.

wjaprep
March 11, 2009 10:43 PM
Cool.

imma miss the tailight on the current tailights, how that singal/brake light work is so cool.

Siawa
March 11, 2009 11:12 PM
That's a slick design.

Imasa
March 11, 2009 11:23 PM
Probably a hint of what the next Range Rover Sport will look like. Very nice.

Jamie.Matthews
March 12, 2009 1:05 AM
Coming to every drug dealer and premiership footballer near you

Renegade
March 12, 2009 2:20 AM
Haha,true and u also forgot every rapper and NFL,NBA,NHL and MLB superstar.

theporscheguy
March 12, 2009 2:17 AM
Paris Dakar??? Wouldn't you rather take something reliable??? Maybe with some performance, like a Cayenne? Not a gutless, overpriced POS that will fall apart if you look at the wrong way and will depreciate faster than anything that moves???

Renegade
March 12, 2009 2:26 AM
Umm,u Porsche fan boys never stop?

scratchy996
March 12, 2009 3:06 AM
i would take a G Klasse or better a Brabus Unimog ! :)

HUMM3R
March 12, 2009 6:59 AM
i would take my Hummer h3, and dont start on criticism until you have owned one. it is a HUGE improvement on the H2. and offers better everything over any other SUV. i mean people in a $350000 ferrari stare at it when i drive by. you dont get that in a g klass....or a porsche or this spiced up freelander

scratchy996
March 12, 2009 11:31 AM
you don't buy a G Class for people to stare at you. people stare at a Hummer 3 and wonder why the hell someone bought that piece of crap.

MTC
March 12, 2009 12:39 PM
This is much better looking than the Cayenne, G Class & the Hummer H3.

Just an opinion

effington
March 12, 2009 3:04 AM
ahahaha "theporscheguy"... completely reasonable, unbiased comments there mate!

scratchy996
March 12, 2009 3:11 AM
i was hoping for this to be based on the Freelander but it seams they want to make it compete against the X6. at least i can hope that the Audi Q3 will be good looking.

trekkerbin
March 12, 2009 4:32 AM
Mum, Range Rover X, Sounded nice!

Kakaofos
March 12, 2009 9:23 AM
Today it looks good, but in two years i'm not sure.

Kakaofos
March 12, 2009 9:32 AM
27 billion (!!!) to develop this model. That sum enough to save economy of whole Africa. Author be attentive.

911fnatic
March 12, 2009 2:04 PM
Who cares about Africa, haha. I live in Africa, but I sure as hell don't care about it :P.

Renegade
March 12, 2009 4:25 PM
Wow, it's the most expensive developing car in the history next to the Veyron, at this price the UK gov should pu the union jack on the hood instead of the Range one, and yeah Tata sure know to do business, buys a company for a few billion and then begs 27 billion from the UK gov.

astonmartindb9
March 12, 2009 6:29 PM
i can see the ford traits.

Deutsch100
March 13, 2009 12:36 AM
I just took delivery of a new 2008 Full Size Range Rover. I was told that the current model is getting a slight nip/tuck for 2010, and a new model will come out at the end of 2011 as a 2012 model. I LOVE the way the current Range Rover looks. Classic, massive, iconic and über-cool. I also love that since the Range Rover 2002+ was designed and made under BMW control, quality is quite high (especially for being a Land Rover:) I feel like I am driving a really posh, big X5! I tried 2 new X5s (2007 & 2008) and reliability was complete rubbish, and materials felt so cheap & plasticky. Not with the Range Rover...everything feels so high quality. I like that so many parts come from the old X5 and 7 Series. The leather is amazing, the wood is beautiful, the controls & plastic pieces couldn't feel better. The Rover rides amazing too, it really feels like a 4x4 S-Class. I hope the new Range Rovers are not going to be some light, thin and Eco piece of junk! Not all of us want to drive around in a tin car Prius!!!

THERENAISSANCEMAN
April 24, 2009 3:36 AM
tasteful design , indeed . no more slab-sided flanks here and there . i bet the shape would return a very slick drag coefficient figure

dima
July 9, 2009 4:33 PM
this is stylish city solution and don't compare your bigger and more operfull issues or you will end up with spase ships... riders :)))

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