Volkswagen Golf Estate Range Car Review
Facts At A Glance
Car: Volkswagen Golf Estate range
Prices: £16,380-£21,075 – on the road INSURANCE GROUPS: 4E-12
Emissions: 109-146g/km
Performance: [1.6 TDI 105] Max Speed 118mph / 0-60mph 11.9s
Fuel Consumption: [1.6 TDI 105] (urban) 49.6mpg / (extra urban) 72.4mpg / (combined) 62.8mpg
Safety: Seven airbags, ABS, ESP
Dimensions: Length/Width/Heightmm 4534/1781/1504

ESTATE DEPARTMENT

Our Rating: 7.6 / 10

Volkswagen’s Golf gets a big boost to its luggage capacity in estate form. Steve Walker reports.

Not one of the more exciting ways to buy a Volkswagen Golf, the Estate version nevertheless delivers the considerable qualities of the hatchback with a 505-litre boot. There should be plenty of family buyers who find it hard to turn up their noses at that.

In scratching around for criticisms that will stick to the imperious Volkswagen Golf, commentators usually settle on one of two things. They’ll either call its design dull or suggest that it might be a little on the expensive side. You can almost hear the sound of straws being clutched at as they do this but, such as they are, these still constitute the Golf’s weak points. That might not bode particularly well for the Golf Estate which, to most eyes, is a step up the frumpy scale from the hatchback and comes in around £500 more costly.

Many estate cars these days have been rechristened with some combination of words like tourer, sport and wagon by product executives keen to bestow some dynamism onto what is a very traditional family car formula. The Golf has stuck with plain old ‘estate’ which speaks both of Volkswagen’s restrained approach in the marketing sphere and the Golf Estate’s no-nonsense persona.

Perhaps, it doesn’t need a fancy name to get its message across. The sixth generation Golf is a resoundingly slick package and the concept of one with more space in the back must certainly appeal to enough families to justify the estate’s existence. The question is whether the car’s practical qualities can overcome any perceived absence of excitement?

The big hitting engines from the Golf don’t come into play with the estate version. The choice does include a worthwhile selection of the lower powered petrol and diesel units from the hatchback line-up. Contrary to what we’ve come to expect in utilitarian vehicles these days, the petrol engines are not there just to make up the numbers. Volkswagen is offering the 1.2-litre TSI turbocharged unit with 104bhp or the 1.4-litre TSI with 120bhp which can dip under the 10-second barrier for the 0-60mph sprint. Both are available with the user-friendly 7-speed DSG gearbox as well as the standard manual one.

The same gearbox choices are available with the majority of the diesel options. The 89bhp 1.6-litre TDI engine i

It’s the refinement levels in the Golf that really set it apart from rival models. Cabin noise is kept remarkably low whether it’s wind, road or engine in origin. The independent suspension serves up a supple ride and deals extremely well with surface imperfections while still letting the driver know what the car is up to. The fine gearboxes and well-weighted speed-sensitive steering only add to what is probably the most rounded driving experience in a car this size.

The clean lines of the Golf are altered little to squeeze in the estate’s extra rear-end capacity. The low, wide grille first seen on the Scirocco coupe merges with the headlamps at each end to form a single band across the car’s nose. Below, the theme is mirrored by the air intake with fog-lamps at its extremities. The Estate is 335mm longer than the five-door hatch at 4,534mm and gets its own tail light design. Beneath the tailgate is a 505-litre boot that will be at the centre of the Golf Estate’s appeal. The hatch can only muster 350 litres, so there really is a lot of room back there. With the back seats folded down, there’s 1,495 litres of capacity which should be enough for most eventualities.

The cabin might lack some sparkle but its quality is a class apart. The instruments are tastefully designed with obvious Audi influences and illuminate in crisp white light. The controls function with typical efficiency and the plastics quality is hard to fault compared to the Golf’s family hatch rivals. Rear legroom is adequate for tall adults so long as the front seats aren’t pushed right back on their runners

There are S, SE and Sportline versions of the Golf Estate. All feature ABS and ESP, seven airbags including a driver's knee airbag, remote central locking, Climatic air conditioning, a CD stereo, plus body-coloured bumpers, door handles and electrically heated and adjustable door mirrors. The roof rails aren’t body-coloured but they are standard and if you want alloy wheels, you’ll need to upgrad

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