Filed under:
Cadillac,
GM
"We were going to do a front-wheel drive
Cadillac compact off of
Delta because it was going to be less expensive," Doug Parks, General Motors' vice president of global product programs, told the
Automotive News during the
Detroit Auto Show in January of this year. That sentence, referring to early
ATS discussions more than five years ago - a period when the automaker, and the industry, was struggling - reveals that Cadillac's highly acclaimed rear-wheel drive compact sedan almost never happened.
Parks revealed that that automaker actually built a 2.0-liter test mule, on GM's Delta platform (shared with the
Chevrolet Cruze and
Buick Verano) and tested it in Europe. While the prototype was "pretty darn good," according to Parks, the team realized that in order to compete against
Mercedes-Benz and
BMW it would have to invest in a new rear-wheel drive platform.
The resulting all-new Alpha platform would eventually underpin the Cadillac ATS, and many would argue that its balanced rear-wheel drive chassis is its single most important attribute. Thankfully, the Alpha's goodness won't stop with the ATS. The upcoming 2014 Cadillac
CTS and the future
Camaro will also share its architecture, meaning the
Cimarron will remain a distant memory.
Cadillac ATS was almost front-wheel drive originally appeared on
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