Forget the furore. Remove from your mind, if you can, the past two weeks’ noise about Living Vivid and Breaking Moulds.
Concentrate instead on the Jaguar Type 00 (Zero Zero), the long-promised concept coupé that introduces an entirely new design style to the 90-year-old marque and sets the tone for its all-EV range that will hit showrooms from 2026.
The concept car is a two-door fixed-head coupé, a body type we’re told will not be built. But it has perhaps been artfully chosen because it loosely echoes the layout of the 1961 Jaguar E-Type, the car nearly everyone cites as the leader of a previous great leap forward in Jaguar design.
Company insiders say the concept coupé’s size, proportions and, above all, its design style are all “very close” to the brand’s first next-generation production car: a blocky Porsche Taycan-rivalling super-GT that was pictured testing earlier this month. That car and its radical styling were first revealed by Autocar back in 2023, and the Type 00 concept shows how accurate our sources were.
This will be the first of three models to be launched within about a year between them on the new purpose-designed JEA architecture. That platform will, Jaguar estimates, offer as much as 430 miles of range and the ability to add 200 miles with 15 minutes of charge. This would suggest power being drawn from a battery in excess of 100kWh, but Jaguar has yet to confirm a pack size.
This concept, revealed on 2 December at Miami Art Week, is the product of an exhaustive process that led designers to produce 13 full-size models on the way, and its maturity shows. All were avant-garde, according to design chief Gerry McGovern. “Anything iterative would not have taken us where we wanted to go,” he said.
Its name, which reprises the word ‘Type’ used for so many great Jaguars, also suggests that future nomenclature won’t stray too far from the past.
Although the Type 00 is a two-door car with forward-hinged dihedral doors and built on a shorter-than-production wheelbase, it tells us plenty about the forthcoming saloon. We already know this is a low, lithe car in the old Jaguar mould, with a raked roof, a long wheelbase and a uniquely long bonnet.
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Changing of the Guard is always harder for the folks left behind. Bravo to Jaguar for their design lurch. As car designers and engineers race to take away the driving-experience, the old generation has enjoyed in the past, the next generation of drivers (and they are dwindling) just do not care about that anymore along with the growing number of millionaires + billionaires. People want the different, not always beautiful, but different and Jaguar knows it. As in the past Jaguar has made some surprising design choices and as I look around today, I see so many influences on auto's that were once criticized. It's the design direction everything is moving to, get onboard... because no cares to look back anymore.
Sterile? I thought they just looked and felt cheap.
Jaguar have cocked up badly with their focus on £100k+ cars. This is the wrong way to go.
What Jaguar need to do is perhaps share platforms with Vauxhall for some cars, perhaps a version of the new 2025 Vauxhall Insignia crossover on Stellantis's STLA medium platform. Perhaps this is the chance to revive the Jaguar XE or X-Type name. However, the platform only supports electric motors up to 443bhp.
But, no, it's not a rebadged Vauxhall - it'd be different-looking.
I could see this selling for about £8.5k more than the Insignia, but it'd work. So maybe it'd start around £39,000 and go up to £50,000 for the sportiest model.
This is a bit of a low point for Jaguar.
Wasn't the brand egalitarian in the Seventies and Eighties?