Car: Vauxhall Agila range
Prices: £9,425-£12,185 – on the road INSURANCE GROUPS: 2-4
Emissions: 119-131g/km
Performance: [1.0] 0-60mph 14.7s / Max Speed 99mph
Fuel Consumption: [1.0] (urban) 47.9mpg / (extra urban) 64.2mpg / (combined) 56.5mpg
Safety: twin front and side airbags, ABS, EBA
Dimensions: length/width/height 3740/1680/1590mm
VAUXHALL SLINGS THE SETSQUARE
Our Rating: 6.4 / 10
At last, Vauxhall has a strongly class-competitive citycar. Andy Enright on the second generation Vauxhall Agila
The demands placed on city cars grow ever more exacting with each passing generation. Time was when a city car needed only to be small, economical and cheap to insure. No longer. The latest Vauxhall Agila must also satisfy those demanding better safety, higher quality, lower emissions and classier styling. First impressions look good. On paper, it looks equipped to tick all those boxes.
As Vauxhall’s Corsa supermini has become bigger and more complex, the vacuum beneath it is even more apparent. Step forward the second generation Agila. As with the MK1 Agila model, this is again a design shared with Suzuki (their car’s called the Splash) but Vauxhall thinks their version will create bigger ripples and become the big fish in the small car pond.
Although Vauxhall are once again sharing technology with Suzuki, this time round things are being worked on a rather different basis. This is no outdated hand-me-down, the latest Agila sporting a bang up to date chassis and three engines that are certainly class competitive at the very least. The line up opens with a 64bhp 1.0-litre three-cylinder petrol unit and continues with a punchier 85bhp 1.2-litre powerplant. This engine is also offered with the option of an automatic gearbox which would certainly take the strain out of nose-to-tail city traffic. The range topper is the 74bhp 1.3-litre CDTi diesel that’s also fitted to the Corsa and the Tigra. Rather underwhelming in the larger, heavier cars, it endows the Agila with a reasonable amount of oomph.
The key criterion that Vauxhall wouldn’t diverge from is a requirement for five doors in a city car. Kia showed that this was a strong attractor with its five-door Picanto, an otherwise fairly unremarkable car that garnered big sales because buyers didn’t fancy herniated discs by hauling a child seat in and out of a three-door car. The Agila integrates those doors a good deal more cleanly than many city tots, the rising waistline of the car giving it a dynamic, wedgy appearance, albeit to the slight detriment of a good view out for shorter kids in the back.
The rear seat backs can also be folded down to create a totally flat load floor, serving up a total of 1,050 litres of available space. Suzuki Splash sister model aside, no other city car can touch this. The hip point for the front seat has been deliberately set high to make getting in and out of the car easy, offering a commanding view of the road and taking advantage of that high roofline. The styling is neat and very well resolved. There’s a certain degree of Mercedes A-Class in the wheel at each corner stance while the rear three-quarter has elements of Renault Modus to it. Overall, the Agila is a very clean and cohesive piece of work.
The Agila will need to be at the top of its game to face down the best in the city car sector. Both Club and Design trim levels are offered with the Club variant delivering basics but little else. It has remote central locking, a CD stereo, front fog lights, the 60/40 split rear seat, electric front windows and electric heated door mirrors. If you want air-conditioning, you’ll need to pay for it or get a Design model which also adds 15" alloy wheels, tinted glass and a leather steering wheel. Safety kit includes front and side airbags, ABS and EBA brake assist. The 1.0-litre and 1.3-litre CDTi models are now badged ecoFLEX to denote their fuel effiecency but they aren’t altered in any way.
The Agila is coming equipped to do battle, with big car features such as optional ESP
