“She may not look like much, but she’s got it where it counts, kid. I’ve made a lot of special modifications myself.”
This weathered 1948 Buick hides a custom frame and an LS9 V8 from a Corvette ZR1.
Buick and Lincoln. Both “entry-level” luxury brands. Both American.
Upcoming cars for Buick: the Cascada convertible, a body style the brand hasn’t had for over 20 years. And the (potential) Avenir, a beautiful concept car that looks nothing else on the road and yet still looks like a Buick.
Upcoming cars for Lincoln: the MKX, a restyled Ford Edge.
Was Ford too busy with the new GT? Did they forget that Lincoln exists? Maybe it’s just bad timing, perhaps Lincoln has some fantastic products in the pipeline. But I doubt it.
Remember when no one cared about Chrysler? And then the company showed off the 300 in 2003? It was the car to get.
Chrysler went from “who cares?” to “gotta have it!”. That’s what Lincoln needs, a car that people lust after.
The Avenir concept from Buick is just the kind of car that excites people about a brand. And unlike some automakers that try to differentiate their halo cars from the rest of the fleet (see Hyundai’s Genesis and Equus), the Avenir looks terrific wearing the Buick badge and grill.
Lincoln sold 94,474 cars in the US last year. That’s significantly less cars than Oldsmobile sold the year the brand was canceled (less than 300,000).
Lincoln’s current lineup is easy on the eyes, but there’s nothing lustworthy. The brand needs something, anything, before it’s too late.
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