The Renault Avantime is a 3-door Minivan (MPV) marketed by the France manufacturer Renault, designed and manufactured by Matra, between 2001 and 2003. As a one-box design without B-pillars, styled by Patrick Le Quément, the Avantime combined the design elements of an MPV, station wagon or shooting brake with the style of a 2+2 coupé and elements of a convertible, and self-described by Renault as a grand tourer.
The name "Avantime" is a portmanteau of the French language word "Avant" (meaning "ahead") and the English language word "time" – with the latter using the English /taɪm/ rather than French pronunciation /tiːm/.
Styled by Patrick Le Quément, the Avantime was intended to combine the space of an station wagon with the four place pillarless qualities of a coupé. Regarding the styling, Thierry Métroz, design project manager, said, "We wanted someone walking around the car to be continually astonished." Anthony Grade, Renault's vice-president of design said, "The exterior and interior had to be coherent. Using the Espace as a base, for instance, meant we had the central instrument display, but that‘s part of the innovative character of the whole vehicle".Paul Horrell, Car, January 2000, pp 80-84. Car magazine described the interior as architectural and luxurious.Paul Horrell, Car, January 2000, page 82. The one-box design eliminated B-pillars and featured an aluminium structure, aluminium panels for the greenhouse and a full sunroof of strengthened heat-reflecting glass. The interior featured four seats, each with built in seatbelts, and leather from Bridge of Weir.
To facilitate access to the rear seats, two long doors featured a double parallel opening hinge system (marketed as "double kinematic") that maximized access and minimized the door outswing. Front side windows lowered automatically when either of the front seats folded forward to further facilitate entry to the rear two seats. Windows featured power deployable sunshades, and the of the rear two seats were higher than the forward two seats, giving the Avantime "theater seating." The luggage compartment featured a retaining system using retractable straps, and all Avantimes featured a two-tone look created by the exposed aluminium of the greenhouse. The windows and panoramic sunroof could open automatically via a single headliner-mounted control, to give the Avantime an 'open air' mode of previous decades hardtop coupes and sedans.
The design borrowed the automotive space frame of the first generation Renault Espace (load bearing galvanized structure with non-load bearing composite panels) and used the PSA 24 valve, 207 hp (152 kW) 3.0L V6 engine, which was coupled to a six-speed manual transmission or five-speed automatic transmission.
A facelift for the Avantime codenamed D67 was planned for 2004-2005 that would have seen the boot lip lowered.
When Matra decided to pull out of the automotive production business in 2003 (partly as a result of the financial loss incurred by the poor sales of the Avantime), Renault chose to discontinue the Avantime rather than move its production elsewhere. 8,557 were built from 2001 to 2003, a figure that makes it one of the worst-selling cars of all time. In 2002, Automobile Magazine said "Le Quement is clearly an outside the box thinker, and the product of his vision is a fascinating exercise, but American buyers' utilitarian expectations of the one box shape just don't jibe with the decadence and frivolity of a grand touring coupe."
2001 | 779 |
2002 | 5,037 |
2003 | 2,226 |
2004 | 48 |
Total: | 8,083 |
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