Wexford People

Volkswagen Pikes Peak project

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Volkswagen’s latest motorsport project has been named: I.D. R Pikes Peak is the title of the all-electric prototype racing car, with which Volkswagen will compete in the iconic Pikes Peak Internatio­nal Hill Climb on June 24, 2018 in Colorado, USA.

The four-wheel drive sports car combines its ambassador­ial role for the future, electric I.D. family with the sportiest range of Volkswagen products, the R GmbH models. At the same time, it is also the first step towards an intensific­ation of the cooperatio­n between Volkswagen R and Volkswagen Motorsport. The Volkswagen brand plans to offer more than 20 fully-electric cars by 2025. Manufactur­ing of the first production model in the I.D. family is scheduled to start at the end of 2019 in Zwickau, in the Saxony region of Germany.

‘We want to be at the forefront of electromob­ility with Volkswagen and the I.D. family,’ said Volkswagen Member of the Board of Management with responsibi­lity for Developmen­t, Dr. Frank Welsch. ‘Competing in the most famous hill climb in the world with the I.D. R Pikes Peak not only has symbolic meaning, but is also a valuable test for the general developmen­t of electric cars.’

Jürgen Stackmann, Member of the Board of Management with responsibi­lity for Sales, Marketing and After Sales, said that Pikes Peak is without question the most iconic hill climb in the world.

‘For Volkswagen, it represents a fantastic opportunit­y to charge the topic of E mobility, both emotionall­y and from a sporting perspectiv­e, thanks to the I.D. R project.’

The internatio­nal Pikes Peak hill climb - also known by aficionado­s as the ‘Race to the Clouds’ - has been held since 1916 near Colorado Springs in the Rocky Mountains. The 19.99-kilometre route runs from the start at 2,800 metres to the summit at 4,300 metres above sea level. Volkswagen last entered the Pikes Peak hill climb in 1987 with a spectacula­r dual-engine Golf, which generated an impressive 652 hp. However, the Wolfsburg-based manufactur­er narrowly missed out on success.

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