The new Citroën C5 Aircross has been revealed with a bold new design language and the option of electric power for the first time, as the French brand renews its assault on Europe's crucial crossover market.
Based on parent company Stellantis's new STLA Medium architecture (like the Peugeot 3008 and Vauxhall Grandland), the second-generation C5 Aircross is the flagship of an overhauled Citroën line-up, sitting above recently refreshed and renewed versions of the Ami, C3 and C4.
As promised to Autocar by designer Pierre Leclerq, the production version of the new C5 Aircross stays true to the bold concept car revealed last year at the Munich motor show, retaining the minimalistic two-box silhouette of the outgoing C5 Aircross but with a wide-reaching focus on aerodynamics in a bid to increase efficiency.
It's bigger than the Mk1, having grown 150mm in length to 4652mm to facilitate a huge 600mm increase in wheelbase - "almost all of which is in the rear leg room", according to Citroën.
Citroën has exploited the more substantial footprint to create what it calls a 'C-Zen Lounge' inside, where "occupants are seated as if in a living room".
The dashboard in particular has been designed with influence from traditional living room furniture, with distinctive foam fabric padding reminiscent of a sofa and available in a choice of light or dark colours. So too can the ambient lighting be configured in eight colours.
At the centre of this new dashboard is an expansive 'floating' touchscreen that Citroën says is the largest yet fitted to a Stellantis car. It largely replaces physical controls but has been designed for ease of access on the move, with fixed status and control bars, programmable widgets and direct access to the climate control.
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So a family car which biggest new selling point is the increased space for passengers, lounge like rear passenger experience, and bigger boot.
Number of photos of the rear seats and boot - zero.
Also, unrelated, 600mm would mean that the wheelbase had increased by 2 feet, imperial. Would that make sense, Autocar/author? It wouldn't. Math isn't, or shouldn't be, that hard, at least not if you have internet access ( it's 60mm, or 6cm, like we say here in the mainland. A bit over 2 inches )