Hinckley Times

Spotlight on the Ateca

- By Peter Keenan

THE Ateca, SEAT’s first SUV, supplied my comedy moment of the year so far. Pulling on to the drive one evening at Keenan Towers my mate jumped out of the car then, appalled, called me round to witness an act of vandalism to my brick paving.

But what he thought was some spray-painting vandal leaving a message was in fact the result of a rather clever spotlight emitted by the door mirror projecting a silhouette of the Ateca’s shape plus moniker on to the floor.

The image, emitted on both sides of the car, is rather fetching and shows the compact SUV’s stylish aspiration­s.

Slide on to the comfortabl­e and fully adjustable driver’s seat and you are struck by the attention to detail SEAT has put into its SUV.

The eight-inch colour touchscree­n features buttons at the side making switching from the map to the choice of radio stations a cinch, even while negotiatin­g the urban jungle.

The dual-zone climate control is similarly easy to use via a rotary dial while the steering wheel is festooned with controls for the car’s many functions. All the switchgear looks and feels modern and there’s automatic wipers and headlights – including full beam –operating via sensors.

The high roofline ensures plenty of headroom, while legroom is also more than adequate. Boot space comes in at a cave-like 510 litres in the front-wheel drive model I drove, with 4x4 models getting slightly less at 485 litres. The rear seats split and fold flat increasing the Ateca’s practicali­ty for shifting large loads when required.

In case you’re wondering where the name came from, Ateca follows SEAT’s preference for naming its cars after an area of Spain – in this case a small town of just over 2,000 people located in the province of Zaragoza in the north-east of the country. However, constructi­on takes place in the Czech Republic alongside another member of the VW family, the Skoda Yeti.

In motoring terms it translates into a mid-sized crossover designed to take on the likes of the Nissan Qasqai, Ford Kuga and Renault Kadjar in a sector that seems to be the only game in town for families looking for versatilit­y, space and style.

The Ateca sits on parent Volkswagen’s MQB platform that has proved its worth in the latest Golf and VW’s Tiguan SUV.

Prices start from under £18,000 which makes it good value against its major rivals. Even the range-topping model comes in at less than £30,000.

It accesses VW Group’s excellent engines so features two petrols and three disesels in the line-up with private and company car buyers catered for.

The Ateca is rare in the SUV world for offering a 1.0-litre turbocharg­ed, three-cylinder petrol engine which, together with front-wheel drive and the manual box, enables SEAT to keenly price the entry-level model. The engine would be too small for most SUVs but the Ateca is relatively light at 1.3 tonnes making the unit a viable option.

The diesels are set to be the most popular with buyers though as the 1.6-litre oil burner I drove claims average fuel consumptio­n in excess of 60mpg as well as tax-limiting carbon dioxide emissions.

All power units are linked to a slick-changing six-speed manual transmissi­on with an automatic gearbox and four-wheel drive also available.

For the UK market the wellequipp­ed mid-range SE cars, featuring dual zone climate control, cruise control, electrical­ly adjustable heated and folding door mirrors and rear parking sensors, are expected to hoover up the majority of orders.

Step up to the First Edition model and sat nav is thrown in as well as keyless entry and a powered tailgate.

The SE Technology model I drove gains roof rails and other bits of bling while flagship XCELLENCE models get 18-inch wheels, leather interior, LED headlights and reversing camera.

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