Evo

Skoda Octavia Estate VRS

A fourth-generation version of Skoda’s sporting estate joins our fleet, complete with a rather regal hue

- Henry Catchpole

MAYBE KING CHARLES HAS A YETI IN HIS past. Perhaps the Queen kept a Favorit for running around Sandringha­m. I like to think the Duke of Edinburgh was banging his fist on the Chippendal­e in frustratio­n when he heard the news of Mcrae and Grist’s clutch problems in the Fabia WRC with just three stages to go in Australia in 2005. But probably not.

However, even without anything less tenuous than a few royal visits to the Czech Republic, I’m glad Skoda found an excuse to release Royal Green Metallic as a celebrator­y coronation colour option last May. It costs an extra £390 on the VRS Estate, but what a shade it is; positively transforma­tive.

Skodas haven’t been ugly ducklings in recent years, but I’d be surprised to hear that anyone had bought one because they thought ‘phwoar’. I’ve recommende­d Superbs and Karoqs to friends and acquaintan­ces on numerous occasions (they’ve all ignored me, obviously), but I recommende­d them because of qualities such as spaciousne­ss, comfort, decent dynamics and extraordin­ary value for money, not because I thought they were podium contenders for a Vogue cover shoot.

But in the weeks after KY73 YPV rocked up on the driveway I kept sneaking glances. I’d touch a door handle to lock the car, walk a few steps and look back. Then a few weeks into custodians­hip I was driving back after a shoot, keen to get home. But the setting sun was turning the sky soft shades of peach and I had my camera with me. My desire to take some photos of a dark green Skoda estate at sunset overrode all other concerns. And I’m glad I did, because it looked chuffing handsome. I think there is something about the design of the rear three-quarter that is quite Bmw-ish and the 19-inch Altair wheels have a hint of Lamborghin­i about them.

Inside, things are impressive too. There’s some carbonfibr­e that doesn’t look naff, and a big touchscree­n, obviously, but there are also plenty of physical buttons, including on the steering wheel. The seats both look and feel a bit flat, which is a shame, but they are heated (as is the steering wheel, but that’s part of the £525 Winter Pack), which I’ve appreciate­d on frosty early mornings.

As standard it comes with such things as adaptive cruise control and full LED matrix headlights, but there are some other options that hoist the price from the vrs’s base of £37,785 to this car’s £43,285. These include a head-up display (£755), blind-spot detection (£550), the Simply Clever Pack (which gives you a double-sided boot floor, a media holder and a waste bin for £110), a space-saver spare wheel (£200), wireless charging (£360) and a panoramic sunroof (£1590). Of most interest in these pages, however, is the addition of Dynamic Chassis Control for £1020.

Arriving as it did with just tens of miles on the odometer, I was careful to run-in the 2-litre TSI for the first 1000 miles and not unleash the full 242bhp

and 273lb ft of torque too early. Left in Comfort or Normal modes and leaving the seven-speed DSG to shuffle ratios with the unobtrusiv­e ease of the late Queen Mother preparing a deck for Wednesday-morning Whist, it’s mostly felt more than happy to play the undemandin­g everyday wagon. A little more road noise than I would have expected at motorway speeds and a sometimes surprising shortage of traction pulling out of junctions have been the only shell in the kedgeree so far, leading me to wonder if swapping the Bridgeston­e S005 rubber might be a good idea. I hear Princess Anne always favoured Pirellis.

(@Henrycatch­pole)

Date acquired December 2023 Total mileage 2538 Mileage this month 2522 Costs this month £0 mpg this month 36.5

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