James Bond screeches around hairpin bends in his preferred ride with a beautiful woman at his side, while they are the car of choice for European, while they are the car of choice for European royalty in which to parade themselves around the Continent’s more opulent capitals.
Now, at last, the opportunity to pop out to the supermarket behind the wheel of an Aston Martin will be opened to the more conventional motorist.
The Aston Martin Cygnet — a new “luxury commuter concept” car, according to its marketeers — is to be built on the base of Toyota’s existing iQ city car and is likely to be available for less than £20,000.
“Small is beautiful these days,” Ulrich Bez, Aston Martin’s chief executive, said yesterday. “We have to move on from the preconceived ideas regarding what Aston Martin is about.”
Mr Bez said that Aston Martin needed to diversify to cope with a sharp fall in demand for its sports cars. “For decades we have seen the big US car manufacturers stick to what they have always done and now they’re on the brink of extinction,” he said.
“This concept will allow us to apply Aston Martin design language, craftsmanship and brand values to a completely new segment of the market.”
It is thought that between 4,000 and 5,000 Cygnets will be built each year. Toyota, attracted by the cachet of Aston Martin, said that it would be the only car that it would make for another manufacturer.
The two companies began their unlikely friendship at the Nurburgring 24-hour race, where they shared garage facilities.
Akio Toyoda, the new president of Toyota and the grandson of the company founder, had raced a Lexus while Dr Bez was behind the wheel of an Aston Martin. Dr Bez said that their friendship grew into a business opportunity.
“When I saw the iQ,” Dr Bez said, “I immediately saw potential for our two companies to work together. Two days after I called Akio Toyoda to discuss this, Toyota’s people were visiting our factory at Gaydon. Just a few months later and we are making public our intentions.”
The chief executive said that he had initially encountered great resistance in his attempts to reform the luxury carmaker when he took over the helm in July 2000. The company, then owned by Ford, was sold in 2007 to a consortium of Kuwaiti and British investors.
Tags: aston martin, cygnet, smart car






Definitely a great idea, as the large car is not as desirable any more. There is plenty of room for a luxury version of the small car, a forward thinker and a tough person is required to overcome the old guard, as any new idea is always resisted with vigour. Well done, M.White
stupid idea