Vauxhall Corsa Van Car Review
Facts At A Glance VAN: Vauxhall Corsavan ENGINES: 1.2-litre 79bhp petrol / 1.3-litre CDTi 74bhp diesel MAXIMUM PAYLOAD: 550kg LOAD VOLUME: 0.92m3 LOAD LENGTH: 1,257mm

PAR FOR THE CORSA?

Our Rating: 7.1 / 10

With the impressive Corsa supermini as a base vehicle, it was always going to be difficult for Vauxhall’s latest Corsavan to go far wrong. Steve Walker reports.

The car-derived van sector is an interesting one. Unlike with larger purpose-built commercial vehicles, we usually have a reasonably accurate picture of how each new entrant into this market is going to turn out. After all, its arrival will usually have been clearly heralded many months beforehand by the emergence of the passenger car on which it is based. It’s a state of affairs that begs the key question: do the same qualities that make a good passenger car also make a good car-derived van? If the answer is yes, then it all bodes rather well for Vauxhall’s latest Corsavan.

Obviously, if you want to shift large and/or heavy payloads, a commercial vehicle based on a supermini is not going to be the model for you. Where this kind of van comes into its own is with operators who only ever have small cargos in tow, who do a lot of their driving around towns where road and parking space is at a premium and who may value the image projected buy a trendy supermini as opposed to a bluff panel van.

Vauxhall’s Corsa is certainly one of the most stylish superminis amongst the current crop. Fiat’s Grande Punto might have the edge in terms of unfettered elegance but the Corsa’s edgy lines offer a snappy, sporty flavour that has definite appeal. The Corsavan utilises the body shape of the three-door Corsa supermini with the roof and window lines parting company at the B-pillars and falling away separately towards the tailgate. The Corsavan’s rear windows are panelled over, of course, but the curve of the passenger car’s glasshouse remains clearly visible and the arched roofline adds to the coupe-like tension in the styling.

The five-door Corsa’s higher roof would have boosted the space available inside the Corsavan but there’s still 0.92m3 of volume back there and operators who find this model’s capacity on the lower limits of what they can get away with would be better advised to go for a larger model anyway – Vauxhall’s own Astravan or Combo perhaps. This load volume is actually 0.2m3 smaller than what was available in the rear of the pervious generation Corsavan but the 550kg maximum payload is an impressive 85kg improvement and looks competitive next to rival models.

Vauxhall have done a thorough job on the load area itself, commendably resisting the financial pressures that might have led them down the crude ‘chop out the rear seats, chuck in a load mat’ route that’s sometimes followed in car-derived commercials. The Corsavan does suffer from significant intrusion into the load area at the sides but the space is lined with tough grooved plastic up to the window line so there’s nothing to catch your cargo on as it’s slid inside. The protection offered by this plastic lining against knocks and scrapes to the van or what it’s carrying is first class and there’s a full-height mesh bulkhead that combines decent rear visibility with further protection - this time for the backs of the driver and passenger’s heads.

The Corsa supermini set new standards for interior build quality and the front of the Corsavan shares this class-leading cabin design that feels all the more superior in a commercial vehicle. Operators harbouring concerns about the kind of soft touch materials and fancy design features that manufacturers include to titillate supermini buyers coming off second best following a few years of hard commercial usage can relax. The Corsa is a sturdily-built customer with chunky controls and durable materials that should cope with all the dust, dirt, rough treatment and spilt tea that your drivers can dish out. All Corsavan models feature a CD stereo, central locking, electric mirrors and tinted tailgate glass, while space for driver and passenger is generous and there’s a reasonable amount of storage space for a supermini-derived model.

The nation’s van drivers can harass their fleet managers as much as they like but no amount of bribery or blackmail is going to land them a Corsavan with the 190bhp 1.6-litre turbocharged engine from the Corsa VXR hothatch. Vauxhall, quite sensibly, won’t be offering it. Parsimony not pace, is the name of the game where small vans are concerned, hence the 1.2-litre petrol (79bhp) and 1.3-litre CDT

Vauxhall Ampera hits roads to Geneva Motor Show

Vauxhall Ampera hits roads to Geneva Motor Show

The very first Vauxhall Ampera production prototype received its first electric charge from the recently installed recharging station at Vauxhalls European headquarters. The Vauxhall Ampera E-REV will use the energy stockpiled in its 16kWh lithium-ion battery to get to the first phase of the 370-mile journey without emitting carbon dioxide. The trip will start from Russelsheim, Germany and will end at the Motor Show in Geneva,...

Read full Article

More News

Astra Boosts Opel's Success

Astra Boosts Opel's Success

At the forefront of Opel's success is its best-selling Astra model that has carried the baton for its beleaguered mother company, General Motors Corporation.  Ever since the launch of new generation Astra, the German automaker has increased its production to make its mark in the car market. Encouraged by the fervent reviews of the Astra, Opel/Vauxhall have made public a series of schemes to guarantee that it meets the market's demand and expectations.  The c...

Read full Article

More News

Vehicle Comparision