Mercedes-Benz is poised to take aim at the growing compact crossover
segment with the five-door GLA -- a vehicle company executives say will
be packed with premium features but carry a competitive price tag.
Mercedes
is unveiling a concept version of the GLA crossover at the Shanghai
auto show. It's a wedge-shaped vehicle that doesn't have the boxy,
masculine and in-your-face design of the larger Mercedes-Benz GLK.
That's good because the GLA is aimed at new buyers who probably don't have Mercedes-Benz on their shopping lists.
In
other words, this is not a soccer mom's car but a vehicle that could
compete with Subaru's Forester, the Volvo XC60, Acura RDX, Range Rover
Evoque and BMW X1.
The GLA is the third vehicle built on the new
front-wheel-drive platform that spawned the slippery CLA compact sedan
that goes on sale in the United States in September and the five-door
B-class electric due in early 2014.
The GLA goes on sale in
September 2014 and will be priced higher than the CLA that starts at
$30,825 including destination, Mercedes-Benz USA executives say. But
it's not likely to go much above the BMW X1 -- the crossover that will
likely be the GLA's prime competitor. Pricing on the X1 sDrive28i starts
at $31,695, including destination.
The GLA concept has a
2.0-liter gasoline turbocharged four-cylinder engine with 208 hp -- the
CLA has the same powerplant -- teamed with a seven-speed dual clutch
automatic transmission. The concept has all-wheel drive; the base
production crossover likely will have front-wheel drive.
The GLA
will be slotted below the GLK -- the smallest Mercedes-Benz crossover
currently sold. It has a length of 172.5 inches, is 77.8 inches wide and
62.1 inches tall. In comparison, the GLK has a length of 178 inches, is
74.3 inches wide and 66.9 inches tall.
"The Concept GLA marks a
new approach for us in the compact SUV segment this is a sporty and more
coupe-like evolution of this category of vehicle," said Joachim
Schmidt, executive president of sales and marketing for Mercedes-Benz.
The
GLA borrows some styling features from the larger Mercedes-Benz
crossovers, including the front skid plate, a load sill guard and a
twin-pipe exhaust system. The concept has an electronically powered
tailgate.
The concept has toys for the auto show crowd. The front
headlamps are each fitted with a laser-beam projector that lights up the
road -- and everything else in front of it. Mercedes says the system
can project pictures or videos onto a screen or any surface. Imagine
trying to get that through NHTSA's approval process.
Mercedes-Benz
isn't spelling out the list of luxury and safety features that will be
standard and optional on the production car. Those details will have to
wait until this fall's Frankfurt auto show where the production GLA will
debut.

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