NISSAN has 1600 reasons to build its fabulous Azeal coupe concept that debuted at the Detroit motor show.
Mentioned alongside icons like the Datsun 1600 as inspiration, the Azeal is a sporty and affordable 2+2-seater fastback in the mould of the 1980s Honda CR-X.
Its designers say the Azeal, if produced, would be aimed at young or first-time car buyers. Hence emotional response elements like a sloping rear roofline, broad shoulders and stance and big wheels. While reflecting Nissan’s current 350Z-inspired proportioning and body surfacing, the inaugural Michigan, USA designed and manufactured Azeal uses an unspecified front-wheel drive small car platform as its base.
Power comes courtesy of a turbocharged 2.5-litre four-cylinder twin-cam engine mated to a six-speed manual gearbox.
The show car's flourishes include "light-jet" headlights backed by prism-like foglights, and a stylised cabin with special Wasabi Chartreuse fabric seats and a glass panel roof with metal inserts, all supported by 19-inch alloy wheels.
According to a Nissan spokesman, there isn’t any word as to if or when the Azeal will make it to production.
But Nissan has a history of having an affordable small-car based coupe in its model line-up.
As well as the early Datsun 1000 and 1200 Coupes, the 1983 Pulsar EXA Turbo and its 1987 EXA Cabriolet successor seemed to combine aspects of the Azeal.