BBC Top Gear Magazine

LOTUS EVIJA

First learn how to say its name, then marvel at Norfolk’s first hypercar. Then faint at the multimilli­on pricetag

- WORDS OLLIE KEW PHOTOGRAPH­Y MARK RICCIONI

With more slashes than a Guns N’ Roses convention and more bhp than any other production car, the Evija ushers in another new era for Norfolk’s number one carmaker

The name. Before we get to the looks of Lotus’s first hypercar, the power of Lotus’s first hypercar, or why indeed Lotus thinks it can blindside Bugatti & Co., let’s deal with the name. What fourwheele­d unobtanium would dare show its angular face in Casino Square or a climate-controlled Abu Dhabi garage without a Countdown wordjumble branded on its backside?

You’ve deciphered Huayra, Rimac, and Koenigsegg. Now, limber up your jowls and stretch your lips around this: Evija. No, not “Ee-vee, yahh”, like some Made In Chelsea mannequin guffawing over a Nissan Leaf. It’s “Evv-eye-ah.” Could have sworn she was one of the minor Stark children from Game of Thrones, but apparently it means ‘the first in existence’. Roughly, it translates from Hebrew as ‘living, to breathe’. And it begins with the letter E, which ought to keep the Lotus purists happy. Little else about the Evija will.

Welcome to the age of the electric hypercar, and Britain’s first entrant. Whether this will be a long chapter in the history of very fast cars, or a curious cul-de-sac on the way to future forms of power and performanc­e remains to be seen. But Lotus isn’t waiting to see which way the tech wind blows and then cash in its Chinese-funded chips.

The latest corporate giant to tee up a Lotus moonshot and propel it into exotica’s premier league is Geely, China’s third-largest carmaker and backer of a resurgent Volvo, start-up carsharers Lynk&Co and the new London black cab company. And what does the portfolio have in common? A dive into electrific­ation. From Polestar to hybrid cabs and now to rural Norfolk – where all 130 Evijas will be built – Geely wants to conquer the world with belief in batteries. And it’s fallen on Lotus to wade into battle against the upstart likes of Rimac, Pininfarin­a and, dare we say it, Tesla.

While you’re still digesting the looks, I’ll divulge what we possibly can about the Not-Oily-Bits. When word first filtered onto the internet about Lotus’s mystical ‘Type-130’ project, the power figure being mooted was a nice, round 1,000bhp+. Fourfigure horsepower has quickly gone from being the preserve of Bugatti and Koenigsegg to the minimum requiremen­t for a newbie to be taken seriously.

And when it comes to electric hypercars, the numbers really are bananas. The Rimac C_Two promises 1,888bhp. Pininfarin­a’s Battista rounds that up to 1,900bhp. It’s the end of car tuning as we know it. So long as the processors can handle the maths, you can pretty much name your power output. And to hell with what the tyres can manage.

Lotus says its target is to be the world’s most powerful production car, with 2,000PS, or 1,972bhp. Torque, totalling some 1,700Nm (1,253lb ft – over double what a McLaren Senna churns out) will be vectored between all four wheels, because

“LOTUS SAYS ITS TARGET IS TO BE THE WORLD’S MOST POWERFUL PRODUCTION CAR”

yep, it’s four-wheel drive. Lotus’s first road-legal 4x4 isn’t the long-mooted SUV after all.

These power boasts are nigh-on impossible to get your head around. And that’s unusual for a Lotus, because instead of asking “How have you made it so light?”, we’re left wondering “Why is it so powerful?” But Louis Kerr, the chief Evija platform engineer, insists Lotus isn’t switching focus from weight-saving to power-craving. “Light weight and efficient, elegant engineerin­g have always been at the heart of the Lotus DNA. That will not change,” he promises TG.

So, the weight. Again, we’re only being fed preliminar­y figures, but the target spec is 1,680kg “in lightest specificat­ion”. Hypercar buyers will pay through the nose and back again to cut kilos, as evidenced by the unpainted, trim-shorn Porsche 918 Spyder mit Weissach Pack. Still, with a driver on board, no amount of carbon trim is going to get the Evija under 1.7 tonnes. Hefty for a Lotus. And massive – it’s Aventador-big. Two metres wide. Is this really the right direction for supercars to plunge in?

The good news is it’s a quarter of a tonne lighter than the 1,950kg Rimac, so while it’s not a feather per se, it’s the least leaden of the new e-hypercar breed. And the balance, despite the batteries being heaped up under the Not-Engine-Bay window, is spread 50:50 between the axles.

The performanc­e claims sound coy for something that weighs the same as a 5-Series diesel but has more power than three M5s. Right now the targets are 0-62mph in sub-3.0secs, 0–186mph in sub-9.0secs (a Chiron takes 13.6secs) and a top speed north of 200mph. Once it’s off the line and the torque-vectoring is doing its thing, accelerati­on should be savage. And silent. Kerr makes no mention at all of any attempt to give the Evija a soundtrack, beyond the “digitally created sound required by regulation­s to alert pedestrian­s to its presence”.

Surely the looks will have alerted folk to the spaceship whispering past their navel? You’ve never seen a vehicle like this.

“YOU’VE NEVER SAT IN A BETTER ASSEMBLED LOTUS. IT DOESN’T SMELL OF FIBREGLASS AND PANIC”

“WHAT’S FASCINATIN­G IS HOW THE CAR SEEMS TO SHAPESHIFT AS YOU WALK AROUND IT”

Norfolk residents who spot one undergoing shakedown will feel like those old Navy pilots who caught glimpses of the secret SR-71 Blackbird. What the heck was tha- oh, it’s gone.

All 130 individual­s who spend £1.5m–£2m on an Evija (plus taxes) are getting a whole lot of nothing for their money. Or as designers prefer to call it, ‘negative space’. Lotus’s design boss Russell Carr explains that EVs give a whole new toybox to unlock.

“The packaging of the battery pack and rear motors offers some flexibilit­y when designing the rear bodywork and diffuser. This has helped us create the distinctiv­e Venturi tunnels. Cooling requiremen­ts are less aggressive than on a 1,000bhp+ combustion powertrain, and this has allowed us this ‘porous’ quality, with air going through the car.”

It’s incredible, but what exactly makes this a Lotus, lookwise? “The prominent muscular haunches and low-mounted cabin have been a feature of Elise and Exige, as well as sports racing cars like Type 11 and Type 40,” says Carr. “The side profile line for the intake of the rear quarter panel Venturi tunnels is reminiscen­t of that used on the more traditiona­l intakes in the Elise and Exige.”

Lotus’s design boss is adamant that a deliberate­ly retro-inspiredde­sign, like the latest Ford GT, was never on the table. Neither, says

engineerin­g, was a hybrid drivetrain. The Evija is a virtuous circle. No engine means less cooling, means neater packaging, means slicker aerodynami­cs. Those rear tunnels are outrageous, aren’t they? What’s fascinatin­g is how the car seems to shapeshift as you walk around it, like a piece of perspectiv­e art hung in a gallery.

From the front-three quarter, it’s a solid object, of punchy stance and brooding haunches. Take a broad step to your left or right. Suddenly, voids open before your very eyes. Light pours through gaping chasms in the car’s shoulders. Shadows are cast beneath the twin-skinned bonnet. The tyres peek through Le Mans racer-like vents ahead of the doors. Supercars always aim to look fast when they’re standing still. This thing looks like it’s coming apart at the seams.

Up until now, Lotus and Williams Advanced Engineerin­g (who also have Singer’s F1-spec Porsche flat-six on their books) have been collaborat­ing in simulator testing, but by the time you read this, Lotus will have put the finishing touches to its first rolling prototype.

We’re confidentl­y told that the look won’t change from what you see before you. From the pop-out cameras for door mirrors to the inboard suspension visible at the nape of the rear window, it’s all approved. Hopefully the Huracán-esque interior, with its driverself­ish digi-screen and birthday card-sized steering wheel will be left untouched, too. Because you’ve never sat in a better assembled Lotus than this. It doesn’t even smell of fibreglass and panic.

Where, how or even why the Evija’s owners will deploy their new toy is a big conundrum to ponder, but Lotus is making nods to usability. The cabin controls are a doddle to suss out. Maximum cruising range is 250 miles – about what you’d get from a big V12 Lambo or Pagani, if you’re careful. Which you won’t be. Not with this much insta-poke. And it’ll fully recharge in 18 minutes. If you’ve got access to a 350kW charger. Great news, if you live in Kent. Because Kent’s home to the UK’s sole 350kW charger.

Still, 40 such chargers are planned for when Lotus begins production in 2020. Expect to see motorway services sales of

WhatYacht? And The Mock Greek Pillar Journal skyrocket. There’s a strange-yet-wonderfull­y true story that on 16 November 1990, the British Parliament debated the morality of Lotus selling its 377bhp take on the Vauxhall Carlton: a family saloon with a top speed of 177mph. Thirty years on, Lotus is going to mic drop a two thousand horsepower road car on the world. Good job all our MPs are otherwise occupied

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We think this is a glove box. Or maybe a charge socket? Frankly we’re a bit confused
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Engine bay contains, for some reason, a load of suspension. They should probably look into that
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Pop-out side cameras let the driver view the world from the perspectiv­e of a curious meerkat
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