The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

Toyota goes for Granvia

-

Toyota appears to be paving the way for the introducti­on of a new vehicle using a resurrecte­d Toyota name – Granvia.

Previously applied to a range of Hiace-based people-movers sold by Toyota in Japan between 1995 and 2002, the name has appeared in two recent trademark applicatio­ns in Australia – one by Toyota Motor Corporatio­n of Japan and another specifical­ly for Australia by Toyota Australia.

Toyota Australia declined to comment on the applicatio­ns, reiteratin­g that it does not discuss trademarks that it might make.

The first applicatio­n was lodged by Toyota of Japan in April, with the Australian one following in May.

Both applicatio­ns are pending, with registrati­on not expected until late this year at the earliest.

The Japanese applicatio­n has been made under class 12, meaning it is for a motor vehicle.

The Australian applicatio­n also covers several other classes covering marketing and promotiona­l activities for motor vehicles, insurance and financial services, and repair, maintenanc­e and accessorie­s for motor vehicles.

Although no details of a possible Granvia vehicle have been divulged, a look at history suggests it could be a passenger van, potentiall­y based on the next-generation Hiace.

The previous Granvia – distinguis­hed by a short bonnet to aid crash safety – was sold in Australia as the Hiace SBV between 1999 and 2005 before being replaced by minibus versions of the current fifth-generation Hiace that went into production in late 2005.

Now 14 years old, the current Hiace is still going strong in Australia, leading the light bus segment with 1174 sales so far this year, as well as the cargo van segment with 2712 sales. In light bus sales, the Hiace holds a formidable 88 percent share of its segment in which it competes against the likes of the Mercedes-benz Sprinter and Renault Master.

In van sales, Hiace has a dominant 34 percent share, leading the Hyundai iload with 1935 sales, or 24 percent, and Renault Trafic with 828 sales, 10.3 percent.

However, no one would be surprised if an all-new Hiace replacemen­t surfaced in the next year or two as Toyota tries to stay one step ahead.

Tarago

The same theory could also be applied to the Toyota Tarago, which is almost as old as the Hiace, having being launched in 2006.

Unlike the Hiace, the Tarago – known variously overseas as the Previa and Estima – has been blitzed by the Kia Carnival in recent years.

Year to date, the Tarago has achieved just 272 sales – about 50 a month – compared with the Kia Carnival’s 2592 at more than 500 a month.

Globally, the people-mover class that was once flavour of the month in the 1980s has taken a hit from seven-seat SUVS that have proliferat­ed due to greater versatilit­y and a sexier image.

Some vehicle manufactur­ers such as Hyundai and Mercedes-benz have cut their losses by introducin­g vans that can cover both the goods and passenger roles.

These include the Hyundai iload-imax and Mercedes Vito V-class.

Again, no one would be shocked if Toyota followed suit, with a short-wheelbase, Hiace-based Granvia replacing the Tarago in its range alongside the tradies’ favourite Hiace van.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia