The Striking Project XVR Concept That Vauxhall Nearly Put Into Production

Back in the 1960s Vauxhall were demonstrating their individuality by started a concept project known as XVR. The Xperimental Vauxhall Research vehicle was to showcase the design abilities of the company in the UK.
 
Back then Vauxhall was a relatively independent entity with its own design and engineering centre. Even though General Motors, GM, had acquired Vauxhall as a luxury car maker back in 1925 they continued to make their own cars. This also led to some development vehicles and concepts.
Back in the 1960s Vauxhall were demonstrating their individuality by started a concept project known as XVR. The Xperimental Vauxhall Research vehicle was to showcase the design abilities of the company in the UK.
 
Back then Vauxhall was a relatively independent entity with its own design and engineering centre. Even though General Motors, GM, had acquired Vauxhall as a luxury car maker back in 1925 they continued to make their own cars. This also led to some development vehicles and concepts.
 
One result was to make Vauxhall more sporting and to create an entry into a new market segment. The XVR sports car was unveiled at the Geneva Motor Show in 1966 and stunned the audience. Vauxhall had essentially built a full sized Hot Wheels car.
 
The XVR concept was managed by the legendary Wayne Cherry at Luton’s Design and Engineering Centre. This later became Vauxhall’s Griffin House HQ.
 
Inspired by parent company GM’s concepts, especially that of the Mako Shark II from 1965. They came up with something that followed those lines, but with a rather unusual take on the doors and windscreen. The gull-wing doors contained the front screen, which was split down the middle and formed part of the opening. The car also featured a clam shell bonnet and pop up headlights.
One result was to make Vauxhall more sporting and to create an entry into a new market segment. The XVR sports car was unveiled at the Geneva Motor Show in 1966 and stunned the audience. Vauxhall had essentially built a full sized Hot Wheels car.
 
The XVR concept was managed by the legendary Wayne Cherry at Luton’s Design and Engineering Centre. This later became Vauxhall’s Griffin House HQ.
 
Inspired by parent company GM’s concepts, especially that of the Mako Shark II from 1965. They came up with something that followed those lines, but with a rather unusual take on the doors and windscreen. The gull-wing doors contained the front screen, which was split down the middle and formed part of the opening. The car also featured a clam shell bonnet and pop up headlights.
Vauxhall built three of them. One clothed in a hand formed in steel by Motor Panels in Coventry. the used a full sized glass fibre model. This car shown in Geneva was fully functional and had a working 74 bhp, 1.6 litre engine. and could reach a top speed of 100mph. The other two were glass fibre mock-ups.
Sadly, the car didn’t make it to production, the slow sales of sister company Opel’s GT put the execs at Vauxhall off the idea. The working Geneva show car was destroyed along with one of the glass fibre ones. The third was discovered in the roof of the Vauxhall design studio some years later.
 
Some features from the design found homes, such as the ultra-slim rear lights. They made it to Vauxhall’s Viva HC and Firenza models.
Vauxhall’s Director of Design, David Jones said: ‘Uncompromising in its styling treatment, the XVR shows the future trend in world automotive design’, when he revealed the Luton company’s radical concept at the Geneva Motor Show in 1966.
 
If only they’d done it, they might be making sports cars now. The car may not have had the performance of any US equivalent, but it looked like nothing else in Britain. Striking is an understatement.

Thanks to Vauxhall for the images.

Simon

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