Toronto Star

Luxury EV offers futuristic design, fun drive

Carbon-fibre monocoque boosts stylish car’s appeal among competitor­s

- SEBASTIEN BELL AUTOGUIDE.COM

When you talk to people about the BMW i3, the question that comes up the most often is “who is it for?” After driving the car for a week and considerin­g the question thoroughly, I have found the answer. The BMW i3 is for me.

I should specify that due to a few bad investment­s and a handful of poor money-managing decisions (by “bad investment­s” here I mean my English degree and by “poor moneymanag­ing decisions,” I mean taking a job in internet journalism), the i3 is actually for a much more affluent version of me. But the point remains that the i3 hits all of my buttons: it’s fun to drive, interestin­g to think about, it’s fun to look at, and for 2019, it gets 30 per cent more kilometres of range.

Carbon is more than a garnish

To start with, the i3 has a carbon-fibre monocoque. That’s ludicrous. Million-dollar supercars still brag about the carbonic fibrousnes­s of their monocoques. Cars that actual people can actually buy aren’t supposed to use this technology yet. But the i3 does.

That means that the i3 is a preternatu­rally stiff car, whose springs can be tuned accurately. You see, the reason we all want stiff chassis isn’t because stiffness is magically better, it’s because it’s predictabl­e. Engineers at the factory can better predict what your springs and dampers and wheels and spine will go through if the variable of chassis flex is taken away.

So the whole stiff chassis thing doesn’t mean that the i3 has a rock-hard, tooth-loosening ride like some sports cars (cough — M3 CS — cough) but rather that it has a well-tuned suspension. It’s comfortabl­e and quiet and gives the car an impression of solid quality that makes it feel well-built.

The other advantage of carbon fibre is, of course, lightness. That means that the i3 with the Range Extender weighs in at around 1,315 kg. The Model 3, meanwhile, weighs in at a portly 1,588 kg. And it’s not just lighter than EVs, even the M3 weighs about 1,580 kg. Even when measured against those good-old-days classics, the i3 comes out looking good.

Like all the best EVs, it gives you that initial boot in the root of accelerati­on that makes you feel like a rock star when the light turns green and keeps the little EV from feeling like a compromise. All of those talking points — the stiff chassis, the light weight, the low torque — that’s all race car stuff. And while this is far from a race car, those elements do still combine to make a car that’s actually, legitimate­ly, honest-to-God fun to drive. I admit it’s no replacemen­t for the M3, but what it is is fun to drive around town. And isn’t that what you really care about?

Inside out I would also argue that from a design perspectiv­e, it’s a more pleasant place to sit than the M3 or even the latest 3 Series. I think it may be down to the fact that BMW wants to convey to you, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that the i3 is a futuristic car. But whatever it comes down to, the interior is nice. Not just in automotive terms. In normal terms, too. And to prove that point, I will now describe it only using quotes from interiorde­sign.net.

The i3 uses “contrastin­g dark and pastel tones” and a “richness of materialit­y” to create “bright, playful interiors full of custom solutions to challengin­g spaces.” Its “panoramic views (...) offer drama” and “it has a special charm.” “Sleek fenestrati­on, and minimalist detailing” “honour (BMW’s) legacy.”

Mind you, the passengers looking to get in the back will have to be small because despite using a teeny-tiny electric motor, the REx also makes use of a small 646 cc engine to extend the car’s range from 245 pure-electric kilometres to nearly 320 combined kilometres. I’m not 100 per cent sure if that’s all of the reason why the back seats are small, but if it is, it’s worth it.

I firmly believe that 245 kilometres is more than most people need on average. To help ease your mind, the range extender will generate a few extra kilometres of electricit­y in an emergency. You can think of it like a jerry can, or the reserve tank on a motorcycle.

The verdict The i3 is a car defined by electricit­y and BMW has been wise not to fight that. From the modernist interior filled with recycled materials, to the tall, skinny tires, to the i8-aping style, to the carbon-fibre monocoque, this is a car whose design team was focused.

It doesn’t necessaril­y excel at the traditiona­l measures that define the automotive segments. It’s not voluminous, it’s not especially powerful, it’s not impressive as far as EVs go, but it feels like it was designed to be as good as possible at being an i3.

It leans into its strengths, using its chassis not just to help it go farther, but to help it drive better, too. It uses its hip-to-begreen confidence to separate it from a crowd of back-in-black interiors. And it accepts that the problem with EVs isn’t just distance, sometimes it’s charging times: it doesn’t matter how far a car could go if you’re 30 kilometres from home with just 10 left in the battery. What you want then is an easy way to go a little farther.

If I had the money to buy a luxury car, I honestly believe I would choose something electric. And if I could choose any one from the current crop of EVs, I’d pick the i3.

 ?? SEBASTIAN BELL PHOTOS AUTOGUIDE.COM ?? The i3 is a car defined by electricit­y and BMW has been wise not to fight that.
SEBASTIAN BELL PHOTOS AUTOGUIDE.COM The i3 is a car defined by electricit­y and BMW has been wise not to fight that.
 ??  ?? From a design perspectiv­e, the i3 a more pleasant place to sit than the BMW M3 or even the latest 3 Series.
From a design perspectiv­e, the i3 a more pleasant place to sit than the BMW M3 or even the latest 3 Series.

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