Alpine Celebration Concept |
However, it also serves to show how Renault, Alpine’s owner, plans to return the sports car brand to the market in 2016.
Alpine Celebration Concept |
Alpine design boss Antony Villain said, “We envisaged the Alpine Celebration show car as the crowning glory of six decades of Alpine style and motor racing. But we wanted to go even further by reaching out to a much broader audience.”
Alpine Celebration Concept |
That project was dissolved when Renault bought back the British sports car brand’s stake in 2014. At the time, Renault said it would continue using the technology developed by the two firms. The Celebration is said to use the project’s platform and construction principles.
The most recent Alpine concept, 2012’s A110-50, featured the V6 engine from a Renault Mégane Trophy race car. However, it is understood that the production version of the Celebration – spied testing at the Nordschleife under a modified Lotus body – will adhere more closely to the A110’s tradition of modest power outputs and light weight by featuring a four-cylinder petrol engine driving the rear wheels.
An output of around 250bhp has been mooted, so the 2.0-litre unit from the Renaultsport Mégane is more likely to feature instead of the 1.6 from the Renaultsport Clio.
Controversially, a dual-clutch transmission is considered more likely than a manual gearbox.
The A110 successor is seen by senior Renault officials as a crucial way of ‘re-legitimising’ the Alpine name, and opening up the potential for a wider range of models.
Laurens van den Acker, Renault’s design boss, said, “The challenge with Alpine is to somehow fill this gap of more than 20 years and do a product that is believable. The car really needs to create the foundation of Alpine. We need to create the 911 of Alpine. If we do that properly, then we can consider cars like the Panamera.”The production Alpine will almost certainly be built in the company’s original factory in Dieppe.
The plant is still under Renault ownership but is used only for small-volume products. It currently makes the Renaultsport Clio, and recently started assembling Bluecar electric vehicles for the Bolloré company that also owns the Source London charging network.
The Alpine Celebration concept is due to make a public appearance at the Goodwood Festival of Speed later this month, as well as an Alpine classic reunion in Dieppe, in September.