Seat’s standalone sporty brand, Cupra, has revealed the full details of its first EV. Called Born, the electric hatchback is built on the same Volkswagen Group MEB platform found under the VW ID.3 hatch and the ID.4 and Audi Q4 e-tron SUVs. In fact, it’s essentially a tweaked ID.3. But playing up to Cupra’s positioning as the everyman’s Lamborghini in the Volskwagen Group’s empire, the Born piles on the visual aggression and delivers more power than its VW cousin. The recent ID.3-based ID.X concept showed that it’s possible to dial in some more street presence to the ID.3 with a few modest upgrades. But right out of the box the Born looks much more dynamic.
The basic body structure is shared with
the ID.3, and unless we’re mistaken, even the doors are the same, though some
clever visual trickery giving the impression of a fashionable floating C-pillar
helps disguise the common DNA. The more important changes, though, happen at
the front and rear ends. A sportier, sloping hood, more angular headlights and
bigger (fake) lower grille give the Born a very different face to the ID.3. And
the rear end is characterized by the horizontal light bar connecting the EV’s
Cupra-specific triangular taillights and a supercar-style diffuser slung
beneath the rear bumper.
Much like the exterior of the Born, the
inside borrows heavily from its opposite number at VW, but there are plenty of
details changes to save it from looking like a carbon copy. The digital
instrument pod gets its own graphics, the standard 12-inch infotainment system
is a more traditional rectangular shape, and the dashboard and door panels are
slightly re-profiled. There’s also raised center console and a moodier use of
dark colors and contrasting copper-look trim to give the whole cabin a defined
performance vibe, while tech fans will appreciate the augmented reality head-up
display available on higher trim grades. hink the high-back bucket seats look
pretty cool? They are, and not just because they ought to be able to keep you
upright on a twisty Spanish mountain road. They’re actually upholstered in a
fabric made from plastic extracted from seas and estuaries.
Like the ID.3, the Born can only be
configured with a single motor powering the rear axle. But there’s still plenty
of variety when it comes to power outputs. The base Born carries a small 45 kWh
battery that’s good for 340 km of WLTP driving range, and its 148 hp output is enough to take it to 100 km/h in 8.9 seconds. Slightly more in keeping with Cupra’s performance
image, the next rung up the ladder brings a 58 kWh battery and 201 hp. That
extends the driving range to 418 km and drops the 100 km/h time to 7.3 seconds. Go for the 228 hp e-boost motor option with with the same
58 kWh battery pack and you get an identical 260 miles of driving range, but
0-100km/h now takes 6.6 seconds. The e-boost features a push-to-pass
button on the steering wheel that unlocks the extra performance.
Finally, if you’re planning on covering
long distances, or are simply too lazy to plug your Born in every night, you
can mate the 228 hp e-boost motor with a bigger 77 kWh battery. That delivers a
strong 335 miles of WLTP range – though not as strong as the 547 km of the leggiest ID.3 – but the added weight of the bigger battery pack knocks
the 100 km/h time back to 7 seconds. One advantage of choosing the
biggest battery appears to be its faster charging rate. According to Cupra’s
launch info only the 77 kWh model makes use of 125 kW charging, which can add 100 km of driving range in seven minutes, and fill the battery from
5-80 per cent in 35 minutes.
As things stand, that’s as hot as the Born
gets. But Cupra is renowned for its hot hatches, so we wouldn’t be surprised to
see something a little hotter appearing in due course. There’s no word on
prices, which probably won’t be released until much closer to the start of
left-hand drive production in September. Europe is obviously the Born’s key
market, though a recent announcement that Australia will get Cupra products in
2022 could be great news for Aussie EV fans if the electric hatch also manages
to get on the boat headed Down Under. Sadly for North America, there are no
plans to bring the Born, Cupra or its ID.3 brother to the US or Canada.