East Bay Times

Hyundai Venue crowds SUV family

- By James Raia CORRESPOND­ENT

Now in its second model year, the Hyundai Venue is the smallest sport utility vehicle and seventh sport or adventure offering in the company’s stable. It fills a niche the South Korean manufactur­er has deemed important. But it’s hard to fathom.

Since the carmaker already offers the Ioniq, Kona, Palisade, Santa Cruz, Santa Fe and Tucson, does it need the Venue?

It’s marketed as a mini or sub-compact, entry-level SUV with a healthy chunk of features and superior gas mileage for its segment. It’s matched against more than dozen competitor­s, notably the Kia Soul, Mazda CX-30, MINI Cooper Countryman, Nissan Kick, Subaru Crosstrek and its Kona sibling.

Hyundai’s pedigree is constantly improving, but competitio­n between two family members? Is it healthy or counter-productive?

As the second-cheapest vehicle Hyundai offers (the Accent is the cheapest), the 2021 Venue is offered in SE, SEL and Denim trims. The reviewed SEL trim gets the best of the base SE and improves upon it.

All trims feature a 121-horsepower four-cylinder engine with continuous­ly variable transmissi­ons and frontwheel. A manual transmissi­on option offered in the Venue’s debut year was discontinu­ed.

The mid-level SEL trim, like all Hyundai cars, has an extensive standard features list — 17-inch aluminumal­loy wheels to a leather-wrapped steering wheel and shift knob and to blind-spot monitoring to rear crosstraff­ic alert. Automatic headlights, Normal, Sport and Snow drive modes, automatic climate control and frontwheel drive are also standard.

Infotainme­nt features are strong: an 8-inch touchscree­n display, six-speaker sound system and Apple CarPlay and Android Auto smartphone integratio­n.

The optional Premium Package ($2,350) is chock-full of worthy items:

LED front and rear lighting, heated front seats, heated side mirrors, power sunroof, keyless entry, pushbutton start and a navigation system. The Venue also features Hyundai’s Blue Link Connected Car System. It includes remote locking and automatic emergency assistance.

With its smaller engine, the Venue’s performanc­e needs improving. It’s satisfacto­ry in city driving, but accelerati­on on freeway inclines is the vehicle’s biggest weakness. Don’t expect any nifty lane-passing maneuvers. The standard 0-to-60 miles-per-hour test takes 9.8 seconds. Gas mileage averages are 30 miles per gallon in city driving, 33 mpg on the freeway.

Its design portrays a bigger presence, but the diminutive SUV’s convenienc­e in tight parking lots and in other situations means smaller is bigger. A smooth, steady ride is the norm, but the engine has an audible struggle at higher RPMs. A moderate wind rush arrives at freeway speeds.

Efficiency is the interior design’s forte. Hard plastic is the material of choice. The front seats are comfortabl­e and spacious, the rear seats not.

The Venue is touted as a five-passenger vehicle, but two adults in the back seats are the reality.

How much cargo capacity can be expected in a subcompact SUV? The Venue is limited among competitor­s, with 18.7 cubic feet behind the rear seats, 31.9 cubic feet with the rear seats folded down. The storage area seems larger because the rear seats fold flat. The rear hatch has a wide, welldesign­ed opening.

In its debut year, the Hyundai Venue finished 20th among all small SUVs in sales, with slightly more than 19,000. The Hyundai Kona finished fourth (76,253), which doesn’t bode well for the smaller offering.

Still, the Venue has its place. Its MSRP is $19,800, making it among the country’s least expensive new vehicles. For $23,480, the SRL trim, with its option package, strong gas mileage and Hyundai’s signature 10-year, 100,000-mile powertrain warranty, is worthy.

How long Hyundai wants the Venue in the family is likely the little SUV’s biggest concern.

 ??  ?? 2021 Hyundai Venue. Image © of Hyundai Motor Company.
2021 Hyundai Venue. Image © of Hyundai Motor Company.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States