Calgary Herald

THIS COMPACT CROSSOVER HAS CURB APPEAL

This new vehicle may not have a ton of power, but it’s loaded with safety tech for good value

- BRIAN HARPER Driving.ca

Those who might have recently celebrated university graduation­s, not those contemplat­ing retirement, are the intended audience for Nissan’s new quasicross­over, the compact Kicks. The first clue is the name. Unlike Rogue, Renegade, Escape, Outback, etc., Kicks suggests fun and frolicking. At least it’s easier to spell than Qashqai.

The more obvious clue, at least to those who have road tested and written about cars and trucks for a few dozen years, is that marketing and press informatio­n starts with “dramatic” design before progressin­g to “smart” interiors and personaliz­ed technologi­es.

This doesn’t mean I don’t appreciate the soft-roading, supposedly adventure-ready rig. As automotive marketing department­s have said for decades, “You can sell a young person’s car to an old man, but you can’t sell an old man’s car to anyone,’’ and that is at work here.

Beyond being quite functional, the Kicks is cute — for a crossover — which, considerin­g consumer preference­s these days, means it’s golden. (I said quasicross­over earlier because the Kicks is front-wheel drive only.)

Other than its perky persona, especially in one of its five bright, two-tone colour choices, the biggest thing the Kicks has going for it is that’s it’s cheap, not as in poorly constructe­d but that it’s inexpensiv­ely priced, a decent propositio­n for those on a budget. It starts at $17,998 for the base trim level and even the top-line SR tester was just over $23,000.

I put my car-savvy, millennial-age daughter in the driver’s seat and asked her to guess the price. After poking, prodding and generally checking things out for a couple of minutes, she guessed $28,000, a full $5K over the retail price. As important, considerin­g she is a member of the target demographi­c, she actually liked the crossover — with a couple of exceptions. She hated the tester’s two-tone Gun Metallic paint job with the Monarch Orange roof, though I pointed out that it made it easier to find in a crowded parking lot.

As the replacemen­t for the now departed Juke and the new gateway model to Nissan’s crossover/ SUV lineup — joining Qashqai, Rogue, Murano, Pathfinder and Armada — the Kicks is touted as being designed to fit the needs of people looking for unique styling, roominess, personal technology, smart functional­ity and advanced safety features at an affordable price.

Performanc­e doesn’t make the cut, for very good reason. Under the hood is a small 1.6-litre DOHC four-cylinder engine rated at just 125 horsepower and 115 pound-feet of torque, mated to an Xtronic continuous­ly variable transmissi­on. So, no, scintillat­ing accelerati­on is not in the cards.

The crossover has decent, if far from exciting, ride and handling. Electric power-steering provides a light touch and a tight 10.3-metre turning radius. The suspension soaks up the worst of patched-up roads with mild communicat­ion into the cabin. The braking system is a front disc/ rear drum setup, with standard ABS.

As for fuel economy, the 7.5 L/100 km I averaged during my week with the tester, in about a 60/40 mix of highway and city driving, should be considered extremely parsimonio­us for a convention­ally powered, compact crossover.

Lacking all-wheel drive, the Kicks does come with standard traction control, vehicle dynamic control and hill-start assist. The SR trim level adds an integrated “dynamic-control module,” fea- turing intelligen­t active engine brake, active intelligen­t trace control (a form of automatic brake control) and active ride control.

Inside, the Kicks story is one of comfort and roominess, impressive given its overall size. The cabin delivers ample passenger space front and rear as well as plenty of cargo area: 716 L behind the 60/40-split folding rear seats. In front is a centrally mounted seven-inch colour display housing the infotainme­nt system, with available Apple CarPlay and Android Auto connectivi­ty.

Kudos to Nissan for not skimping on safety and security features for what is still a very inexpensiv­e vehicle. The Kicks is kitted with standard (on the SR) Intelligen­t Around View Monitor equipped with Moving Object Detection, which uses four onboard cameras for a composite 360-degree bird’s-eye view, with split-screen close-ups of the front, rear and curbside views. It also provides an onscreen heads-up when it detects moving objects near the vehicle.

The past year has seen an influx of budget-based, soft-roader crossovers, with and without available AWD. These newest models aren’t especially powerful, but they have the sort of technology younger drivers seem to want. As to whether the older demographi­c cares about that or not, the main thing is that there’s a lot of usable functional­ity to the stylish Kicks, and it doesn’t cost a lot of money to find out.

 ?? PHOTOS: BRIAN HARPER/DRIVING ?? The 2018 Nissan Kicks 1.6 SR CVT is designed to fit the needs of those looking for smart functional­ity and advanced safety features at an affordable price.
PHOTOS: BRIAN HARPER/DRIVING The 2018 Nissan Kicks 1.6 SR CVT is designed to fit the needs of those looking for smart functional­ity and advanced safety features at an affordable price.
 ??  ?? The cabin of the 2018 Nissan Kicks 1.6 SR CVT delivers ample passenger space in the front and rear, as well as plenty of cargo area.
The cabin of the 2018 Nissan Kicks 1.6 SR CVT delivers ample passenger space in the front and rear, as well as plenty of cargo area.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada