The first ever Genesis G70 has been revealed at an
event in Korea, with the strikingly sporty compact sedan clearly offering an
alternative to the mainstay models in this segment of the luxury car market.
The freshest luxury car offering on the planet is a product of Genesis, the
luxury arm of Hyundai.
If it doesn’t really look much like the Genesis
models you’ve seen come before it, there’s good reason for that – the Genesis
G70 is said to show us what we can expect from the brand as its range grows.
It fits the bill in terms of size, with a length of
4685 mm, width of 1850 mm and height of 1400 mm aligning it closely with its rivals.
It rides on a 2835 mm wheelbase. The new Genesis G70 shares DNA with the Kia
Stinger – including the same engines as its slightly larger Kia sibling, and
it’s built on the same platform, too.
The interior of the G70 features a driver-centric,
horizontally-dominated design, and the company’s focus of quality materials is
clear, with aluminium door handles, quilted leather door panels, and
quilted/Nappa leather seat trim. There will be five interior trim colours to choose
from: Obsidian Black, Sandstorm Grey, Velvet Burgundy, Tobacco Brown and
Vanilla Beige. Not enough? There’ll also be two Sports trims (red and grey) for
the high-end sportiest offerings.
As for exterior paint options, there are 10:
Platinum Silver, Carbon Metal, Marble White, Titanium Black, Racing Grey,
Graceful Grey, Lapis Blue, Royal Blue, Blazing Red and Umber Brown. Genesis
says it has developed a new paint finish with aluminium particles in the paint.
It’s not yet clear whether all of those colour options will be offered in
Australia.
The G70 completes the Genesis sedan range, slotting
in below the renamed G80 (previously sold in Australia as the Hyundai Genesis)
and the G90 large sedan, which isn’t sold in Australia. It may seem odd to some
of you that the brand would invest heavily in the shrivelling sedan market
rather the focus on SUVs, but there are Genesis SUVs coming, too. One must
simply follow the natural order of things.
It’s clear Genesis is pitching its smallest sedan as
a sporty offering – the pitch, according to the press documentation, is a
driving character that is “agile yet safe, dynamic yet quiet”. Every model has
a launch control mode fitted, as well as a mechanical limited slip differential
and dynamic torque vectoring. The G70 runs a rack-mounted, motor-driven power
steering system and has multi-link rear suspension. Australian models will have
a country-specific tune, too, courtesy of Hyundai’s Aussie engineering team.
International markets will have the choice of three
drivetrains – a 2.0-litre turbo petrol (with 258 Hp of power/353 Nm of torque), a
3.3-litre bi-turbo V6 petrol (with 370 Hp/510 Nm) and a 2.2-litre turbo diesel
four-cylinder (204 Hp and 440 Nm) – and the choice of rear-wheel or
all-wheel-drive. Hyundai claims a 0-100 km/h time of 4.7
seconds for the 3.3-litre turbo model, undercutting the 4.9-second time already
confirmed for the Stinger. Acceleration times for the other two engines are
still to come.
Technology is a focal point for Genesis, with the
artificial intelligence platform Kakao, and it features a server-based voice
recognition system. The media system is an 8.0-inch touch-capacitive unit with
Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, and there’ll be stereo systems with up to 15
speakers available. The G70 also adopts the G90’s “smart posture control
system”, which adjusts the seat, steering wheel, side mirrors and head-up
display to the “optimal position” based on the driver’s body information.
Safety tech is also key, with Genesis claiming the
G70 offers an “unparalleled suite of advanced driver assist systems” including
forward collision warning and avoidance with pedestrian and cyclist detection,
a system called Highway Driving Assist with adaptive cruise control and
lane-keeping assist, and assistance systems for blind-spot monitoring and
driver fatigue monitoring.
The G70 goes on sale in Korea from September 20,
with other world markets to follow.