New 2021 Subaru BRZ confirmed for November unveiling

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aria-label="Subaru BRZ"Subaru has officially previewed the next-gen BRZ sports car on Twitter, and confirmed it will be revealed in the coming weeks.

The image gives little away beyond the design of the car’s new 10-spoke alloy wheels, but the caption confirms that its global unveiling will take place “this fall”, meaning we’ll see the wraps come off before December.

A prototype of the next-generation BRZ was spotted earlier this year, giving us a first look at the hotly anticipated sports coupé’s production styling.

aria-label="subarubrz.g05"It will get 188kW from a turbocharged petrol engine. Like its predecessor, it will be mechanically – and likely visually – identical to a Toyota being launched at around the same time, expected to be called the GR86.

The images reveal that the BRZ’s familiar curved silhouette forms the basis for the styling of the next-generation car, but we can see for certain that the front grille has been significantly enlargened and there are new light designs at both the front and rear.

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A similarly compact footprint to the outgoing model tallies with earlier reports that the Toyota-Subaru duo will swap from their current Subaru-derived underpinnings onto the TNGA architecture that underpins Toyota’s Corolla family hatchback and can be adapted to suit a rear-wheel-drive powertrain.

aria-label="subarubrz.g04"As with the previous model, however, the BRZ and its GR86 sibling will use an engine from Subaru’s current line-up, likely the 2.4-litre four-cylinder boxer motor found in the US-market Ascent SUV. Its 188kW output represents a substantial upgrade over the 147kW offered by the current BRZ’s naturally aspirated motor, which suggests Subaru and Toyota are looking to target more potent sports cars, such as the Alpine A110.

Also on the cards is a comprehensive interior overhaul for both models, with improvements made in material quality, infotainment functionality and usability. The size and shape of this new prototype suggests, however, that there hasn’t been a move to significantly extend rear leg room to enhance the car’s grand touring potential.

Subaru and Toyota extended their model development partnership last year, confirming that a successor to the GT86 and BRZ was under development. Sharing the high cost of designing and building a sports car makes it a more economically viable proposition, given that demand for such models has tailed off in recent years.

The two firms will also collaborate on a new electric vehicle architecture with the ultimate aim of jointly launching an electric SUV with Subaru-derived four-wheel drive technology and Toyota’s powertrain hardware.

The first sighting of a BRZ development mule came just two weeks after Subaru announced that it was ending production of the original model, eight years after its launch.

Felix Page

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