Westfield Is Making A New Sports Car That Isn't A Lotus 7 Clone

British firm Westfield is branching out, planning to build a freshly designed sports car
Westfield Is Making A New Sports Car That Isn't A Lotus 7 Clone

Up until now, there’s been a Lotus 7 kind of theme to the cars produced by Westfield. Save for a few Radical-like bike-engined track day specials, Lotus 7-inspired sports cars have been the order of the day for the British company, but that’s all set to change thanks to the new GTM.

So far, Westfield hasn’t revealed a great deal. The GTM name comes from the kit car manufacturer Westfield acquired in 2007, but there isn’t even a design sketch available yet. A 252bp Ford Ecoboost engine - currently used by Westfield in the Sport 250 (above) - will sit in the car’s space frame chassis, and a sub-1000kg weight figure is being targeted. There’ll be coupe and convertible versions, and production is set to begin in 2018.

So far, so predictable, but there are also plans for a hybrid version, and an all-electric car with a 200 mile range. Sounds awfully complicated for a small, niche manufacturer. But there should be plenty of money in place to get the project moving, and from an unusual source at that: autonomous ‘pod’ vehicles.

Westfield Is Making A New Sports Car That Isn't A Lotus 7 Clone

These little capsules are often used as transport solutions in controlled environments (airports, for instance), and are in high demand. Westfield Autonomous Vehicles - a subsidiary of the Westfield Technology Group that also owns the sports car business - has already made 20,000 of the things for customers around the world, and the market is expected to grow dramatically.

So, what we have here is a company profiting and staying relevant via the rise of autonomy, while still making bonkers, lightweight sports cars. That sounds like something we can get behind.

Comments

Joel Brennan

The design definitely isn’t deja vu, is it? No, I don’t recall seeing it before.

11/08/2017 - 02:07 |
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DL🏁

Thats how you do it.

  1. sell stuff that sells well (EVs, autonomous stuff, SUVs, etc)
  2. Reinvest most profits back into the stuff that sells well
  3. Invest some of the profits into stuff that is exciting and good for the brand (sportscars etc)

Thats also how Porsche did it (Cayenne and CGT)
And thats what companies like Mitsu didn’t want to do (realised SUVs sell better than Evo, axed the Evo completely and ran off chasing profits with their SUVs)

11/08/2017 - 08:29 |
0 | 0
Wreckless

They went from copying lotus to copying the ferris wheel pods in London and making them into automobiles, what an improvement

11/08/2017 - 19:50 |
0 | 0

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