- Slide of
Introduction
This car was unlike anything we'd ever seen from a car company, leave alone Renault.
First shown at the 1999 Geneva motor show, the Renault Avantime was conceived to provide the practicality of an estate car with the swooping, pillar-less looks of a coupé.
Renault wanted passers-by to look at the car and be "continually astonished", with its one-box design, some of the longest (and heaviest) doors ever to be fitted to a production car, and oddly-shaped lights unlike any we had ever seen before.
But what else makes this car such a trailblazer? Join us as we look through its short life, and why it looks didn't quite add up to a justifiable sales volume.
- Slide of
- Slide of
Made by Matra
It was also the product of an obligation, a commitment to give the Matra factory at Romorantin in central France something to make in the aftermath of Renault’s decision to shift production of the Espace MPV elsewhere now that its body was to be made from sheet steel rather than the ferrous and composite mix that was Matra’s speciality.
- Slide of
Glamour
Renault’s designers were faced with the extraordinary challenge of coming up with a new and glamorous machine using the hardware of a large MPV. It’s a tribute to their collective imagination that they managed anything at all, never mind a towering coupe with the profile of a teapot shorn of its handle.
- Slide of
Design
The Avantime was a coupe in principle, but unlike almost every other car of this description it did not have a dramatically raked roof line, the necessary flourishes of style created instead by a pronounced bustle and its bay rear window. But it did have a coupe’s elongated doors and pillarless side windows, too.
- Slide of
Inside
If you sat in the sumptuous, sofa-like seat in the rear you could enjoy the breeze and an almost unobstructed view to the side, and above too thanks to the glazed roof. Riding in the rear should have been one of the glories of this car, but hopeless packaging meant that back-benchers had the legroom of rush-hour rail passengers.
- Slide of
The doors
This was not the Avantime’s only flaw. Those huge doors, which swung on cantilevered hinges with the weighty momentum of an opening vault, weighed 56 kilos (123 lb) apiece and meant that if you parked an Avantime facing up a hill there was a very good chance that you’d be trapped, the door’s heft holding it shut.
- Slide of
The end
Renault had endless trouble perfecting the sealing of their frameless windows, trouble that delayed the car’s launch and ought to have earned it the nickname Pas Avantime – the not-before-time. This strange, troubled machine ended its career ahead of schedule, too.
- Slide of
The superfan
Its wonderfully wilful oddness was too much for most, and it faded out after a mere three seasons, having sold 8552 examples, in 2003. This brave Briton bought nine of them that year, the world’s largest fleet of the cars, and used them for delivering and repairing computer equipment. He clearly likes cars that are different - today, his company runs a fleet of BMW i3s instead.