San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

TURNING A NEW LEAF

Nissan’s Ariya EV impresses with silky style and a serene driving experience

- HENRY PAYNE New car review RAY MAGLIOZZI Click and Clack

Like the Kardashian­s on a budget, Nissan is a value brand with a taste for high fashion. Go to a Nissan dealership to buy a $25K Sentra loaded with standard goodies — auto high beams, adaptive cruise control, wireless Apple Carplay/android Auto — but be sure to wander over to the $45K Murano Platinum SUV and ogle its sculpted grille and quilted albino leather seats.

The brand’s new electric vehicle, the Ariya, is of the latter stylish persuasion.

Draped in bronze, my $45K tester should be strutting down a posh Paris runway, not an uneven Detroit street. Its lines are toned, sculpted. A blackened roof floats above its copper physique. Chic. Check out the shard-like spokes on the 19-inch wheels, also dipped in bronze. Like Mrs. Payne negotiatin­g grated city streets in high heels, I’m careful I don’t stumble into a Michigan pothole.

Step inside and Nissan wants to whisk you away to a club lounge. The unique cabin evokes a five-piece furniture set: four leather seats around a table. The console moves with the touch of a button so that different body types (I’m tall, my wife a foot shorter) can adjust the furniture to best operate the automatic shifter. There’s even a drawer in the dash for storage.

Haptic-controlled, colored climate controls are set into the lush wood of the tabletop — er, dash. The landscape is interrupte­d by a single knob — for volume.

It took me back to my 2014 Detroit News Vehicle of the Year, the Cadillac CTS, that tried similar bleedinged­ge e-controls. They were controvers­ial and ultimately abandoned — but the Ariya advances the art with a light

touch to activate. Not so the console buttons.

Located aft of the shifter, Drive Mode, Self-park and e-step selectors all require a deliberate push to engage. Nissan assumes you won’t be accessing them often — and it wants you to look at them, not casually punch at them as you might climate control.

As for the blocky shifter, it’s the only raised item on the console face. Like a TV controller sitting on a side table, it makes the device go. This simple elegance sits under the most convention­al feature in Ariya’s cockpit — a single screen that contains twin 12.3-inch instrument and infotainme­nt displays familiar to other EVS like the Hyundai Ioniq 5 or BMW ix.

Ariya’s flowing architectu­re is distinctiv­e. In the age of EVS, drivetrain­s are all similar. Same lithium ion battery, same electric motors, same instant torque. Smooth? Yes. Quiet? Yes, but how do you create brand separation?

That’s a challenge for BMW, whose silky-smooth inline-6 cylinder engines separated it from the proles. But with an e-motor making a Nissan as smooth as a Bimmer (uh-oh), the Bavarian brand has resorted to piping into the cabin wild electronic sounds to set it apart. Think hard rock guitar versus a Japanese flute.

For Nissan, the serene EV experience is the whole point. As is the exterior — a much more pleasing symphony of lines compared to Bimmer’s in-your-face kidney grille. Ariya’s serenity dovetails with the exterior’s smooth, soaring lines and the interior’s comfortabl­e furniture.

I put my foot into the Ariya through Oakland County’s lake country, but this isn’t a vehicle that wants to be flogged. It’s a warmblood horse aimed at the dressage competitio­n, not a thoroughbr­ed vying for the Kentucky Derby crown.

To this end, Ariya is technicall­y proficient, performing its duties with poise. Cruising a crowded parking lot for a space, I pressed the SELF-PARK button for perpendicu­lar parking. An arrow pointed at an open space as I passed.

I stopped the car, put it in reverse and Ariya did the rest. Unlike competitor­s, however, Ariya won’t extract itself from the space — either perpendicu­lar or parallel.

More comprehens­ive is Ariya’s self-driving ambition.

So nerdy is Nissan about this sci-fi stuff that it debuted an ad campaign touting its semi-autonomous moves along with the launch of “Rogue One,” the Star Wars prequel. But Rogue’s adaptive cruise system was a novice compared to Ariya’s semi-autonomous Skywalker.

Cruising along I-696, I toggled adaptive cruise and a green wheel appeared. After a few miles that changed to a blue wheel — the symbol of hands-free driving as I’ve grown used to with my Tesla Model 3’s Autopilot. While Tesla requires torque on the wheel so the system knows you’re present, the Nissan only needs a touch. As a result, the car is easy to self-drive for miles.

My brief time in the Ariya around Metro Detroit didn’t offer me the chance to see how routinely I can access the Blue Wheel mode — but I’ll do a more comprehens­ive road trip in the future.

A longer road trip will also allow me the chance to explore Nissan’s trip navigation software. Presently, Tesla is miles ahead of the industry with its dedicated charger network and parallel navigation system. Other automakers — Ford, for example — have been making strides in integratin­g their navigation systems with third-party networks from Electrify America, Evgo and Shell.

I asked Ariya to navigate to, say, Charlevoix, Mich. (a common Payne family destinatio­n), and the system only responded with a direct route devoid of chargers. Ariya apparently assumes you’ll plan a route using a phone app. That won’t impress cross-shoppers with the Ford Mustang Mach-e or Tesla Model Y.

Speaking of cross-shoppers, Nissan realistica­lly assumes that Ariya’s competitiv­e set is other EVS like Mach-e and VW ID.4 and Kia EV-6 and so on. My $51K Engage AWD tester comes in 10 grand north of a loaded Nissan Rogue Platinum. A comparable AWD Ariya Platinum will sticker for $20K north of its Rogue peer.

This is quite a change from Nissan’s initial strategy when it pioneered the EV market 13 years ago with the nerdy-looking Leaf. Even with healthy government incentives, Leaf hasn’t caught on with budgetmind­ed customers. With Ariya, Nissan seems determined to erase memories of Leaf with its more dashing Ariya sibling.

These are two vehicles that shop at different clothing stores — Leaf at Walmart and Ariya at Nordstrom. Ariya has even rejected Leaf ’s signature center-hood charging port for a right-side charger door.

For all the noise about government­s mandating Ev-only sales in just seven years, Ariya and its EV peers are aimed at premium niche buyers who appreciate its grace — and excellent taste in furniture. And those buyers will also have a Pathfinder or Murano in the garage for long-distance family adventures.

Payne is an auto critic for The Detroit News. This story was provided by Tribune News Agency.

The Shell’s full 2023 summer season lineup.

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 ?? NISSAN TNS PHOTOS ?? The 2023 Nissan Ariya features neat features like a console that can be moved to suit different body styles.
NISSAN TNS PHOTOS The 2023 Nissan Ariya features neat features like a console that can be moved to suit different body styles.

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