Tag: BMW

  • The new BMW i3 looks like a huge moment for BMW and I really want to see it in the flesh

    The new BMW i3 looks like a huge moment for BMW and I really want to see it in the flesh

    I have always had a soft spot for BMW.

    Partly because I just like the cars, but also because BMW has been around me for as long as I can remember. I was brought up in and around BMW dealerships, and my first proper job was as a Saturday boy working as a Dealer Host for a BMW retailer. So whenever BMW does something important, especially with the 3 Series bloodline, I pay attention.

    And this feels important.

    BMW has revealed the new all-electric i3, the second model in its Neue Klasse era, and on paper it looks like one of the most significant cars the brand has launched in years. BMW is talking about this car as a fresh take on the core of the brand, and that makes sense because the 3 Series has been one of the most solid, dependable and recognisable cars in the BMW line-up for decades. It is not just another model. For many people, it is the BMW.

    BMW i3 Neue Klasse Electric

    Why this matters

    The 3 Series has always had a difficult balancing act to pull off.

    It has needed to be sporty without being tiring, premium without feeling overblown, and sensible enough to live with every day while still giving drivers something to enjoy. That is a big part of why it has lasted so long and why so many people keep coming back to it.

    So the challenge for this new electric i3 is not just to be fast, efficient or packed with tech. It has to feel worthy of the badge and the nameplate it is following.

    That is where my curiosity really kicks in.

    Because while a lot of electric saloons now chase range, screens and straight-line pace, BMW is making a big point of saying this car still delivers the sort of driving experience people expect from a 3 Series. The company says the new i3 has been engineered around its new Heart of Joy control system, which manages the key driving functions, and it claims this will help give the car the sort of precise, assured handling BMW buyers expect.

    The headline numbers are properly big

    BMW says the new i3 will offer up to 560 miles of range under the WLTP cycle, which is a huge number if it stacks up well in the real world. It is also built around an 800-volt architecture and supports charging speeds of up to 400kW, with BMW claiming as much as 249 miles of range can be added in just 10 minutes at the right rapid charger. That would put it right up there with the most impressive EVs on sale when it arrives.

    The launch model will be the BMW i3 50 xDrive, with dual motors producing 469hp and 645Nm of torque. So no, this is not BMW easing gently into the electric future.

    BMW i3 Side Profile

    It looks like a 3 Series, but from the future

    That is probably what I find most interesting about it visually.

    BMW says the new i3 is instantly recognisable as a 3 Series, and I can see what it means. The proportions still feel familiar for a BMW saloon, but the details are much cleaner, more dramatic and far more modern. There is a new shark-nose front end, a fresh take on the kidney grille, a coupe-like roofline, flush door handles and a much more stripped-back overall shape. It looks less busy than a lot of current BMWs, and for me that is no bad thing.

    I also quite like the fact that BMW has not simply turned this into another crossover. The industry is full of electric SUVs already. There is something reassuring about BMW still believing a sleek saloon can sit at the heart of the brand.

    BMW i3 Interior

    Inside, BMW is going all in on the next generation feel

    The cabin sounds like a major departure from what we know today. BMW says the new i3 gets its Panoramic iDrive set-up with a wide windscreen display, a large central touchscreen, a new steering wheel and Operating System X. The whole idea is to make it feel cleaner, more intuitive and more driver-focused. BMW is also using more recycled materials, including seat trim made from 100 per cent recycled polyester.

    That all sounds promising, although I will be honest, this is exactly why I want to see the car in the flesh.

    BMW interiors can look fantastic in photos and on a spec sheet, but the real test is how it all feels when you sit in it. Does it still feel special? Does it still feel driver-focused? Does it still feel like a BMW? Those things matter just as much as the technical headline figures.

    BMW i3 Interior Back Seats

    I am especially interested to see whether it still has that 3 Series magic

    That is the big question for me.

    The 3 Series has never just been about performance numbers. It has always been about the way the whole car comes together. The seating position. The steering. The sense that it shrinks around you once you are on the move. The feeling that it can handle the daily grind and still make a back road feel worthwhile.

    BMW clearly knows that, because the language in this announcement leans heavily on driving pleasure, driver orientation and the long-standing appeal of the 3 Series. That tells me they know exactly how much is riding on this car.

    BMW i3 Rear

    When is it coming?

    BMW says production of the new i3 will begin in August 2026, with first UK customer deliveries expected in autumn 2026. Pricing and full UK specification are still to be confirmed.

    My take

    On paper, this looks like a very serious car.

    The range claim is massive. The charging speeds are impressive. The performance is strong. And perhaps most importantly, BMW is not trying to pretend this is just a gadget on wheels. It is trying to make the electric i3 feel like a genuine continuation of everything people have loved about the 3 Series for years.

    As someone who has been around BMW from a young age, and who still sees the 3 Series as one of the brand’s defining cars, I find that genuinely exciting.

    Now I just want to see it in the flesh.

    Because this is one of those cars where the details, the stance and the atmosphere are going to matter just as much as the spec sheet. And if BMW has got this right, the new i3 could end up being one of the most important electric cars the brand has ever launched.

  • BMW ALPINA becomes a standalone BMW Group brand. A new chapter begins.

    BMW ALPINA becomes a standalone BMW Group brand. A new chapter begins.

    BMW has officially launched BMW ALPINA as a standalone brand within the BMW Group umbrella, following the transfer of the Alpina trademark rights on 1 January 2026. It is a big moment. Not just for BMW, but for one of the most respected and quietly influential performance marques in automotive history. 

    Rather than chasing outright speed or lap times, BMW ALPINA is doubling down on what has always made it special. Effortless performance. Supreme comfort. And a sense of calm confidence that few performance brands can match.

    Performance, but with polish

    BMW ALPINA cars have always lived in a space of their own. Powerful engines, yes. But also beautifully judged suspension, subtle design tweaks, and cabins that feel more like a luxury lounge than a race car cockpit.

    That philosophy remains central to the new BMW ALPINA brand. The focus is on:

    • A balance of high performance and long-distance comfort
    • Distinctive driving characteristics, tuned for the real world
    • Exceptional materials, craftsmanship and acoustic refinement
    • Deep levels of personalisation, tailored to individual buyers

    These are cars built for people who appreciate engineering detail, not showmanship.

    A new wordmark rooted in heritage

    To mark this new era, BMW ALPINA has revealed a fresh wordmark. It sits centrally on the rear of the car and reinforces the brand’s standalone identity within BMW Group.

    The design is modern and understated, but deliberately inspired by Alpina’s asymmetric logo from the 1970s. It is a nice touch. A visual bridge between the brand’s past and its future, without losing the calm, restrained confidence Alpina has always stood for.

    A quick look back. How Alpina earned its reputation

    Alpina’s story starts in 1965 in Buchloe, Germany. Founder Burkard Bovensiepen began by developing tuning kits for BMW engines, initially focused on carburettors. The quality was so good that BMW honoured the factory warranty on cars fitted with Alpina parts. That was almost unheard of at the time.

    By the late 1960s and 1970s, Alpina had made a name for itself in motorsport, competing successfully in touring car racing across Europe. Over time, the brand shifted away from racing and leaned into road cars that offered something different from BMW’s own M division.

    Alpina became known for:

    • Strong but understated performance
    • Long-legged cruising ability
    • Hand-finished interiors
    • Bespoke wheels, stripes and subtle badging

    Crucially, Alpina cars have been recognised as manufacturers in their own right, complete with their own VIN numbers. That status, and the brand’s reputation among enthusiasts, is exactly why BMW has treated this transition with such care.

    Modern exclusivity, the Alpina way

    BMW says the initial phase will focus on brand activation rather than a rush of new models. That feels deliberate. Alpina buyers value continuity and confidence, not hype.

    Every BMW ALPINA will continue to be built to strict standards, with an emphasis on how the car looks, feels and sounds. The bespoke options list will remain a core part of the appeal, allowing owners to create something genuinely personal.

    This is not about chasing trends. It is about serving a very specific type of customer. Someone who wants performance without drama, luxury without excess, and individuality without shouting about it. 

    Why this matters

    In a world where performance cars are becoming louder, firmer and more aggressive, BMW ALPINA feels like a quiet act of rebellion. The move to position it as an exclusive standalone brand signals long-term commitment, not dilution.

    For enthusiasts, it should mean the values that made Alpina special are protected. For BMW, it strengthens the group’s luxury and performance offering in a way no other brand quite can.

    BMW ALPINA has never been for everyone. And that is exactly the point.