The Mercury News

2019 Lexus LS 500 commands the road in style

- By James Raia CORRESPOND­ENT

Like naval fleets, automobile manufactur­ers have flagships. Commanding officers, weaponry or distinguis­hed flags aren’t involved. Still, carmakers’ highest-profile vehicles are their proudest presentati­ons.

Luxury brands thrive on their topline offerings, which for the upscale division of Toyota is the Lexus LS 500.

Redesigned inside and outside last year, the 2019 LS 500 retains the full-size luxury sedan’s finer attributes. Its uber-quiet ride is complement­ed by its interior designer’s best traditiona­l touches. Technology is top-shelf.

Well-heeled German brands Audi, BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Swedish rival Volvo all attract high praise for their handsome, forward-thinking exterior designs. But with the South Korean-made Genesis, Lexus has infiltrate­d the former monopoly of European manufactur­ers’ often exalted luxury sedan loftiness.

The powerful sedan has angular, sleek lines and is near stealth. Occupants have much else to praise, but the LS 500’s commanding presence quickly attracts attention.

The five-passenger cruiser is available in one trim level. It’s equipped with a 3.5-liter, twin-turbocharg­ed V6 with 416 horsepower and 10-speed automatic transmissi­on. Five drive modes are offered. Rear-wheel drive is standard; all-wheel drive is optional. A hybrid version is also available.

Accelerati­on is swift and steady. The 0-60 miles per hour standard is achieved in 4.9 seconds. Gas mileage averages are 19 miles per gallon in city driving, 30 miles per gallon on the freeway. The LS 500 is equipped with 10 airbags.

Manufactur­ers can’t slack when determinin­g the equipment lists of their luxury vehicles. The LS 500 fares well.

The standard features list is comprehens­ive: 19-inch wheels, an adaptive suspension, LED headlights, a sunroof, a hands-free trunk and power-closing doors.

Leather upholstery, power-adjustable heated and ventilated front seats, a heated leather-wrapped steering wheel, 16-way power-adjustable heated and ventilated front seats, and a power rear sunshade are also included.

Standard driver aids include: front and rear parking sensors, blind-spot monitoring, rear cross-traffic alert, forward collision warning, pedestrian detection, lane keeping assist, adaptive cruise control, automatic high beams and automatic wipers.

With its vast 2018 redo, only a handful of changes differenti­ate this year’s offering. Apple CarPlay and Amazon Alexa join the technology features stable. A 24-inch head-up display and an upscale wheel design are new as stand-alone options.

The LS 500 is satisfacto­ry without options. Its base price is $75,200. The Executive Package ($23,110), one of the priciest available among mainstream manufactur­ers, offers worthy items. But there’s also ill-conceived, unnecessar­y opulence.

Power front seat belts and reclining and heated rear seats? Perfect. Power side-window sunshades? It’s a luxury car, right?

But while revered as hand-cut Japanese glassware, the Kiriko door trim, which debuted in 2018 models, looks like afterthoug­ht chunks of costume jewelry. The hand-pleated interior door panels resemble corrugated cardboard.

A few other options: a Mark Levinson audio system with 23 speakers ($1,940), a panoramic glass roof ($1,000), panoramic view monitor ($800) and 20-inch forged alloy wheels ($2,450) are justifiabl­e extravagan­ces. But with a few other odds and ends, the sedan’s top price is a pause moment — $111,925.

For years, Lexus has defended its futuristic-looking trapezoid grille as something different in an industry of beige. But at best, the grille is upside down; at worst, it defines ugly.

The Lexus infotainme­nt center is operated by a touchpad on the console. It’s a sensitive contraptio­n and provides plenty of opportunit­y for distracted driving.

The 2019 Lexus LS 500 no doubt defines flagship. It’s beautiful and proud and provides driving therapy during long freeway hauls. It’s a modernized version of the traditiona­l big sedans of yesteryear.

But it’s most worthy with a few wellchosen options. It’s doesn’t need overt embellishm­ent to rule an automotive fleet.

 ??  ?? The 2019 Lexus LS 500. (Image courtesy of Lexus)
The 2019 Lexus LS 500. (Image courtesy of Lexus)
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