All Topics  
Minivan

 
Minivan

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Minivan



 
 
A minivan, multi-purpose vehicle (abbreviated MPV), people-carrier, people-mover or multi-utility vehicle (shortened MUV) is a type of automobile
Automobile

An automobile or motor car is a wheeled motor vehicle for transportation passengers, which also carries its own car engine or motor. Most definitions of the term specify that automobiles are designed to run primarily on roads, to have seating for one to eight people, to typically have four wheels, and to be constructed principally f...
 similar in shape to a van
Van

A van is a kind of vehicle used for transporting goods or groups of people. It is usually a box-shaped vehicle on four wheels, about the same width and length as a large automobile, but taller and usually higher off the ground, also referred to as a light commercial vehicle or LCV....
 that is designed for personal use.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Minivan'
Start a new discussion about 'Minivan'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


Mhv Lloyd Lt600
A minivan, multi-purpose vehicle (abbreviated MPV), people-carrier, people-mover or multi-utility vehicle (shortened MUV) is a type of automobile
Automobile

An automobile or motor car is a wheeled motor vehicle for transportation passengers, which also carries its own car engine or motor. Most definitions of the term specify that automobiles are designed to run primarily on roads, to have seating for one to eight people, to typically have four wheels, and to be constructed principally f...
 similar in shape to a van
Van

A van is a kind of vehicle used for transporting goods or groups of people. It is usually a box-shaped vehicle on four wheels, about the same width and length as a large automobile, but taller and usually higher off the ground, also referred to as a light commercial vehicle or LCV....
 that is designed for personal use. Minivans are taller than a sedan, hatchback
Hatchback

Hatchback is a term designating an automobile design, containing a passenger cabin with an integrated cargo space, accessed from behind the vehicle by a single, top-hinged tailgate or large flip-up window....
 or a station wagon
Station wagon

A station wagon in American English, Australian English, Canadian English and New Zealand English usage and an estate car in British English usage, is a passenger automobile with a car body style similar to a sedan but with the roofline following the full, sometimes extended rear cargo area, i.e. ending with a more vertical door...
, and are designed for maximum interior room.

The term

The term "minivan"was coined in North America
North America

North America is the northern continent of the Americas, situated in the Earth's northern hemisphere and almost totally in the western hemisphere....
, deriving from the fact that these vehicles were considerably smaller and more streamlined than traditional North America
North America

North America is the northern continent of the Americas, situated in the Earth's northern hemisphere and almost totally in the western hemisphere....
n passenger vans, such as the Ford E-Series
Ford E-Series

The Ford E-Series, formerly known as the "Econoline" or "Club Wagon", is a line of Full size van vans and truck chassis from the Ford Motor Company....
.

Other terms are used in other English-speaking countries. In Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
 and India
India

India, officially the Republic of India , is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, the List of countries by population country, and the most populous liberal democracy in the world....
, "multi-purpose vehicle" (MPV) describes the general vehicle type without reference to its size. These are described with a word before the acronym: a "mini MPV
Mini MPV

Mini MPV is a car classification used to describe supermini car or subcompact which have taller build, fitting below the compact MPV and large MPV classifications....
" is derived from a supermini
Supermini car

A supermini is a British car classification term that describes automobiles larger than a city car but smaller than a small family car. This car class is also known as the B-segment across Europe, and as Subcompact in North America....
, a "compact MPV
Compact MPV

A Compact MPV is a car classification used in Europe to describe multi-purpose vehicle versions of small family cars , fitting between the mini MPV and large MPV sub-segments....
" is based on a small family car and a "large MPV" has about the same size as a large family car
Large family car

A large family car is a Europe car classification of automobile which are larger than a small family car and smaller than an executive car. Models designed by luxury car automaker are also called compact executive cars or simply compact executives, while a multi-purpose vehicle based on a large family car is called a large MPV....
. In Asia
Asia

Asia is the world's largest and most populous continent. It covers 8.6% of the Earth's total surface area and, with over 4 billion people, it contains more than 60% of the world's current human population....
, "multi-utility vehicle" (MUV) has more or less the same meaning as MPV. "People-carrier" and "people mover" describe both large MPVs and minibus
Minibus

A minibus or minicoach is a passenger carrying motor vehicle that is designed to carry more people than a minivan, but fewer people than a full-size bus....
es, but not smaller models.

Characteristics


Overview

Minivans are usually between 1600 and 1800 mm tall (or between 65 and 70 in), which is around 200 mm (8 in) taller than a sedan, hatchback
Hatchback

Hatchback is a term designating an automobile design, containing a passenger cabin with an integrated cargo space, accessed from behind the vehicle by a single, top-hinged tailgate or large flip-up window....
 or a station wagon
Station wagon

A station wagon in American English, Australian English, Canadian English and New Zealand English usage and an estate car in British English usage, is a passenger automobile with a car body style similar to a sedan but with the roofline following the full, sometimes extended rear cargo area, i.e. ending with a more vertical door...
. The engine is mounted very close to the front edge of the car, and its elements are grouped higher than in other car types to minimize front overhang length. The rear overhang may be both short like a hatchback or long like in station wagons, changing the boot vs seat balance – the first option is more common in smaller minivans and the second in large minivans

Seats

Seats are located higher than in lower cars with a higher H-point
H-point

In vehicle design and especially automotive design, the H-point is the relative vertical location of an occupant's Hip , specifically the pivot point between the torso and upper leg portions of the body, either relative to the floor of the vehicle or relative to the height above pavement level -- and pertinent to seating comfort, visibility...
, giving passengers seat more upright, posture and leaving more room for the legs. Some people find this seating position uncomfortable and prefer lower automobiles, while the disabled, the elderly or people with little flexibility may benefit from the lack of need to "sit down" when entering the car.

Larger minivans usually feature three seat rows, with two or three seats each: 2-3-2, 2-2-3 or 2-3-3 (front to rear) are the most common seating configurations. Smaller minivans tend to have two seat rows, with a traditional 2-3 configuration. There are some exceptions, like the Honda FR-V
Honda FR-V

The Honda FR-V is a six-seater compact MPV introduced by Honda in 2004. Alongside the Fiat Multipla, it is currently the only compact minivan with a 3+3 seating configuration available on the European market....
, Fiat Multipla
Fiat Multipla

The Fiat Multipla is a compact MPV manufactured by Italian automaker Fiat since 1998. Based on the Fiat Brava, the Multipla is quite unlike any other on the market....
 and Mercedes-Benz R-Class
Mercedes-Benz R-Class

The R-Class is a multi-purpose vehicle offered by Daimler AG in 2006 model year under the Mercedes-Benz brand. It is the first minivan ever produced by Mercedes-Benz, although it does not have sliding doors, which many consumers, particularly Americans, associate with minivans....
 which are six seaters (3-3 in the first two cases and 2-2-2 in the latter).

Minivans may have seats, either benches or individual seats, that are designed to be relocated, removed, folded partially (on-floor) or folded completely under-floor — allowing variable seating capacity and cargo room.

Chassis and drivetrain

In contrast to van
Van

A van is a kind of vehicle used for transporting goods or groups of people. It is usually a box-shaped vehicle on four wheels, about the same width and length as a large automobile, but taller and usually higher off the ground, also referred to as a light commercial vehicle or LCV....
s, sport utility vehicle
Sport utility vehicle

A sport utility vehicle is a generic marketing description for a vehicle similar to a station wagon but built on a light-truck chassis. Usually equipped with four-wheel drive for on or off-road ability, some SUVs include the towing capacity of a pickup truck with the passenger-carrying space of a minivan....
s (SUV) and many crossover SUV
Crossover SUV

A crossover — variously called CUV or crossover utility vehicle — is a marketing term for a vehicle that derives from a car automobile platform while borrowing features from an Sport utility vehicle or Minivan....
s, most current minivans are front-wheel drive
Front-wheel drive

Front-wheel drive is a form of Internal combustion engine/transmission layout used in motor vehicles, where the engine drives the front wheels only....
. The main advantage is somewhat better traction than rear-wheel drive vehicles under slippery conditions like rain, snow and ice. This configuration also allows more inner area along the floor, due to the absence of the driveshaft hump. With rear seats removed, the cargo area in large minivans can hold a 4x8 ft sheet of drywall
Drywall

Drywall is a common building material typically made of a layer of gypsum plaster pressed between two thick sheets of paper, then kiln dried. Drywall is used globally for the finish construction of interior walls and ceilings....
 or plywood
Plywood

Sorry, no overview for this topic
 flat. Four-wheel drive
Four-wheel drive

Four-wheel drive, 4WD, 4x4 , or AWD is a four-wheeled vehicle with a Powertrain that allows all four wheels to receive torque from the engine simultaneously....
 was also introduced to minivans in North America
North America

North America is the northern continent of the Americas, situated in the Earth's northern hemisphere and almost totally in the western hemisphere....
 with the Toyota Van Wagon 4WD
Toyota Van

The Toyota Van was a vehicle produced by Toyota and distributed worldwide in a multitude of versions. The 'Van' was a slightly larger version of the Toyota LiteAce/Toyota TownAce....
 and the Volkswagen Vanagon Syncro
Volkswagen Type 2

The Volkswagen Type 2 was the second automotive line introduced by Germany automaker Volkswagen. It was a van introduced in 1950, initially based on Volkswagen's first model, the Type 1, also known as the "Volkswagen Beetle"....
. Full-time all-wheel drive was introduced to North American minivans in the 1990 Ford Aerostar
Ford Aerostar

The Ford Aerostar was Ford Motor Company first minivan, and was introduced as a 1986 model in summer 1985. The Aerostar was unique since it combined the trucklike rear-wheel drive and towing capacity of the Chevrolet Astro/GMC Safari with car-like user-friendliness of the Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager....
 with the E-4WD option, and in 1991 with the introduction of the Toyota Previa All-Trac. The Toyota Van 4WD remains the only minivan offered for sale in the North American market with selective 4WD.

Most modern minivans feature unibody architecture, which offers superior crashworthiness and a more comfortable ride than a body-on-frame
Body-on-frame

Body-on-frame is an automobile construction technology. Mounting a separate body to a rigid frame which supports the drivetrain was the original method of building automobiles, and its use continues to this day....
 chassis, and is typically lighter. The Chevrolet Astro / GMC Safari
Chevrolet Astro

The Chevrolet Astro was a rear-wheel drive minivan introduced by Chevrolet in 1985 to rival domestic competitors the Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager twins and the Japanese Toyota Van....
 was the last body-on-frame rear-wheel drive minivan but is now discontinued,

In the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
, in order to be governed by more lenient safety and emissions regulations, minivans are classified as light truck
Light truck

Light truck or light duty truck is a classification for trucks or truck-based vehicles with a Cargo capacity of less than 4,000 pound s ....
s. Unlike their European counterparts, manual transmissions have disappeared due to lack of demand; 1995 was the last year for a manual transmission in the Ford Aerostar and Chrysler minivans and GM had discontinued the manual transmission in the Chevrolet Astro and GMC Safari some time before.

Doors

Door configuration for Minivans are highly variable. Access to the rear interior may be through one or two sliding or outswing rear side doors. Early minivans featured one rear side sliding door on the passenger's side, similar to full-sized passenger vans in the early 80's. Many current minivan feature rear doors on both sides; swinging doors are the norm for European and Japanese minivans, while most American models feature sliding doors. Some models featuring power sliding doors.

Segments

Minivans can be roughly classified in three or four segments: large, compact, mini and sometimes micro. Models of all segments are present in Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
, the Americas and parts of Asia
Asia

Asia is the world's largest and most populous continent. It covers 8.6% of the Earth's total surface area and, with over 4 billion people, it contains more than 60% of the world's current human population....
.

Large minivans are those above 4600 mm (180 in) long. Nearly every minivan sold in the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 belongs to this segment, so they are simply called minivans there. The first European MPV also belonged to this segment, and later similar models were named likewise until smaller models appeared; now these models are called "large MPVs". Examples are the Dodge Caravan
Dodge Caravan

Chrysler introduced the Dodge Caravan minivan along with its badge engineering variant, the Plymouth Voyager in November 1983, for the 1984 model year — followed by the Dodge Grand Caravan and Plymouth Grand Voyager long-wheelbase models in 1987, the badge engineering Chrysler Town and Country in 1990, and the Volkswagen Ro...
, Honda Odyssey
Honda Odyssey

The Honda Odyssey, known in Europe as the Honda Shuttle, is a minivan, or "large MPV", produced by the Japanese automaker Honda since 1994....
, Ford Galaxy
Ford Galaxy

The Ford Galaxy is a large MPV first introduced in 1995....
 and Eurovan.

Compact MPV
Compact MPV

A Compact MPV is a car classification used in Europe to describe multi-purpose vehicle versions of small family cars , fitting between the mini MPV and large MPV sub-segments....
s have a length of between 4200 mm and 4600 mm (165-180 in). Such models enjoyed some popularity in the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 in the late 1980s and early 1990s, for example the Mitsubishi Expo
Mitsubishi Chariot

The Mitsubishi Chariot, is a five door, five/seven seat compact MPV produced by Mitsubishi Motors of Japan from 1983 to 2002. It was based on the SSW concept car first exhibited at the 23rd Tokyo Motor Show in 1979, and named for the battle chariots used during the times of the Ancient Greece and Roman Empires....
 and Nissan Axxess. In 1996, the Renault Scénic
Renault Scénic

The Renault Sc?nic is a compact MPV produced by France automaker Renault, the first to be labelled as such in Europe. It is based on the chassis of the Renault M?gane small family car....
 was released in Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
 and its success made mainstream automakers produce them in large quantities, usually based on small family car platforms and with both two and three-row seats. As of 2007, the only compact minivans available in the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 are the Mazda5 and Kia Rondo
Kia Carens

The Kia Carens is a compact MPV launched in 1999 by the Korean manufacturer Kia Motors. It was discontinued in Australia in 2001, but production continued elsewhere for a new model which was launched in 2003....
.

Mini MPV
Mini MPV

Mini MPV is a car classification used to describe supermini car or subcompact which have taller build, fitting below the compact MPV and large MPV classifications....
s are under 4100 mm (160 in) long, and were introduced in the early 2000s. These models are based on supermini
Supermini car

A supermini is a British car classification term that describes automobiles larger than a city car but smaller than a small family car. This car class is also known as the B-segment across Europe, and as Subcompact in North America....
 platforms and have different styles depending on markets: Japanese models are more boxy while Europeans have the bonnet and windshield almost parallel. Examples of mini MPVs are the Opel Meriva
Opel Meriva

The Opel Meriva is a mini MPV based on the platform of the third generation Opel Corsa and sold under that name on all of the European markets with the exception of the United Kingdom, where it is called the Vauxhall Meriva....
, Renault Modus
Renault Modus

The Renault Modus is a mini MPV designed and built by the French automaker Renault in Valladolid, Spain since September 2004. The production version is very similar to the concept car of the same name, which was presented at the 2004 Geneva Motor Show....
, Fiat Idea
Fiat Idea

The Fiat Idea is a mini MPV built by the Italy manufacturer Fiat since 2003. The car is based on the Project 188 platform, originally used for the Fiat Punto#Mark 2....
, Toyota bB
Toyota bB

The Toyota bB is a small wagon produced by the Toyota Motor Corporation based on the Toyota Vitz. 1.3 L and 1.5 L Straight-4 engines are available....
 and Nissan Cube
Nissan Cube

The Nissan Cube is a mini MPV produced by Nissan and sold only in Japan. It is scheduled to be released in the American and Canadian markets in Spring 2009 and European market in Q4 2009....
.

Tall city car
City car

A city car is a small, moderately powered automobile intended for use in urban areas.It is comparable in size and features to a neighborhood electric vehicle , has four seats, and is typically long....
s and kei car
Kei car

Kei car, K-car, or , is a Japanese category of small automobiles, including automobiles, microvan, and kei truck. They are designed to exploit local tax and insurance relaxations, and in more rural areas are exempted from the requirement to certify that adequate parking is available for the vehicle....
s like the Hyundai Atos
Hyundai Atos

The Hyundai Atos is a city car produced by the Hyundai Motor Company. The original Atos was introduced in 1997. In 1999, it was joined by the less controversially styled Hyundai Atos Prime....
, Chevrolet Matiz, Chery QQ
Chery QQ

The Chery QQ is a city car produced by the China manufacturer Chery Automobile in 2003. In 2006, the car was renamed the Chery QQ3 in China, when Chery launched their new supermini, the Chery QQ6....
 and Suzuki Wagon R
Suzuki Wagon R

The Suzuki Wagon R is a kei car first introduced in Japan in 1993. The R stands for recreation. It is one of the first cars to use the "tall wagon" design in which the car is designed to be unusually tall with a short bonnet and almost vertical hatchback and sides in order to maximise cabin space while staying within the kei car dimension res...
 have also been called mini MPVs or "microvans" because of their increased height over traditional hatchbacks. Others believe they are too similar in design with other small cars, so they should be described as the same kind of cars.

Early minivans models may be smaller than modern models, but still fit into the child subsegment; the first-generation Renault Espace
Renault Espace

The Renault Espace is a large MPV from French car-maker Renault. Generations 1-3 were sold under the Renault brand but manufactured by Matra. The current fourth generation model, which seats seven passengers, was designed and is built by Renault; the Renault Grand Espace is a long-wheelbase version with increased rear leg room and boot...
 introduced in 1984 would be classified nowadays as a compact MPV, but later generations grew in size and the Espace is now considered a large MPV. Indeed, it is expected that the next-generation Espace will be smaller in size than the current model.

History

Apart from the visionary Stout Scarab
Stout Scarab

The Stout Scarab was a 1930s United States automobile produced in small numbers by Stout Engineering Laboratories of Detroit, Michigan. Among a host of novelties and innovations, the Stout Scarab is credited by many as the world's first production minivan ....
 (1935), the most important predecessors of minivans were compact van
Compact van

A compact van is a type of van characterized by a flat front design, mechanicals based on a compact car, an engine placed either at the rear or between and behind the front seats and were roughly the same size as the Volkswagen Type 2....
s. In 1950, the Volkswagen Type 2
Volkswagen Type 2

The Volkswagen Type 2 was the second automotive line introduced by Germany automaker Volkswagen. It was a van introduced in 1950, initially based on Volkswagen's first model, the Type 1, also known as the "Volkswagen Beetle"....
 adapted a bus-shaped body to the compact Volkswagen Beetle
Volkswagen Beetle

The Volkswagen Type 1 is an economy car produced by the Germany auto maker Volkswagen from 1938 until 2003. The car was originally known as K?fer, the German language word for "beetle," from which the popular English nickname originates....
. It placed the driver above the front wheels, sitting behind a flat nose, with the engine mounted at the rear
RR layout

In automotive design, a RR, or Rear-engine design, Rear-wheel drive layout is one which places both the Internal combustion engine and drive wheels at the rear of the vehicle....
. The two hinged side doors were opposite to the driver's side, with none on the driver's side, Fiat
Fiat

Fiat S.p.A. Fiat based cars are constructed all around the world?the largest concern outside Italy is in Brazil . It also has factories in Argentina and Poland....
 built a similar vehicle based on the fiat 600
Fiat 600

The Fiat 600 [say-chento] is a city car produced by the Italy automaker Fiat from 1955 to 1969. Measuring only 3.22 m long, it was the first rear engine Fiat and cost the equivalent of about ? 6,700 or US$ 7300 ....
 with the same engine and door layout. Japan
Japan

Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, People's Republic of China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south....
ese and American
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 manufacturers responded with compact van
Compact van

A compact van is a type of van characterized by a flat front design, mechanicals based on a compact car, an engine placed either at the rear or between and behind the front seats and were roughly the same size as the Volkswagen Type 2....
s since the 1960s. Usually based on front-engined compact cars with a FMR layout, the engine was mounted behind or under the front seat with a flat, vertical nose. Examples include the Ford Econoline, Chevrolet Van
Chevrolet Van

The Chevrolet Van was one of several vans made by General Motors for North America. Its strongest competition was the Ford Econoline van and the Dodge Ram Van....
, Suzuki Carry
Suzuki Carry

The Suzuki Carry is a kei truck produced by the Japanese automaker Suzuki. The microvan version is sold as Suzuki Every. In Japan, the Carry and Every are Kei cars but Suzuki Every Landy, the bigger version of Every had a longer hood for safety purposes and a larger 1.3-liter 82 hp 4-cylinder engine....
, Toyota Hiace
Toyota Hiace

The Toyota Hiace is a automobile produced by the Japanese manufacturer Toyota. First launched in 1967, the Hiace has since been available in a wide range of configurations, including minivan and minibus, van, pick-up, taxicab, ambulance and motorhome....
 and Subaru Sambar
Subaru Sambar

The Subaru Sambar is an automobile built by automaker Subaru for the Japanese market. It is the first Keitora available in Japan. Available in microvan and Kei truck to fulfill the Kei car guidelines....
. When Volkswagen introduced a sliding side door on their van in 1968, it then had all the features that would later come to define a minivan: compact length, three rows of forward-facing seats, station wagon-style top-hinged tailgate/liftgate, sliding side door, passenger car base.

As the American vehicles such as the Econoline evolved into larger full-sized vans, the term minivan came to use in North America
North America

North America is the northern continent of the Americas, situated in the Earth's northern hemisphere and almost totally in the western hemisphere....
, when Toyota and Chrysler
Chrysler

Chrysler LLC is an American automobile manufacturer that has manufactured automobiles since 1925. From 1998 to 2007, Chrysler and its subsidiaries were part of the German based DaimlerChrysler ....
 launched their respective smaller minivan products for the 1984 model year. It is interesting that this could be seen as a Detroit response to the "Baby-Boomlet" when the Baby-Boom children were starting to have children. The Toyota Van
Toyota Van

The Toyota Van was a vehicle produced by Toyota and distributed worldwide in a multitude of versions. The 'Van' was a slightly larger version of the Toyota LiteAce/Toyota TownAce....
 and Dodge Caravan
Dodge Caravan

Chrysler introduced the Dodge Caravan minivan along with its badge engineering variant, the Plymouth Voyager in November 1983, for the 1984 model year — followed by the Dodge Grand Caravan and Plymouth Grand Voyager long-wheelbase models in 1987, the badge engineering Chrysler Town and Country in 1990, and the Volkswagen Ro...
 / Plymouth Voyager
Plymouth Voyager

The original Plymouth Voyager was a twin of the Dodge B-series van from 1974 to 1983. Beginning in 1984 the Voyager name was applied to a new vehicle based on the Plymouth Reliant car....
 featured very different structural designs: the Dodge Caravan / Plymouth Voyager had a FF layout
FF layout

In automotive design, a FF, or Front-engine design, Front-wheel drive layout places both the Internal combustion engine and driven wheels at the front of the vehicle....
 and unibody construction, while the Toyota Van Wagon featured a FMR layout and was built on a body-on-frame
Body-on-frame

Body-on-frame is an automobile construction technology. Mounting a separate body to a rigid frame which supports the drivetrain was the original method of building automobiles, and its use continues to this day....
 chassis. The Chevrolet Astro / GMC Safari
Chevrolet Astro

The Chevrolet Astro was a rear-wheel drive minivan introduced by Chevrolet in 1985 to rival domestic competitors the Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager twins and the Japanese Toyota Van....
 and Ford Aerostar
Ford Aerostar

The Ford Aerostar was Ford Motor Company first minivan, and was introduced as a 1986 model in summer 1985. The Aerostar was unique since it combined the trucklike rear-wheel drive and towing capacity of the Chevrolet Astro/GMC Safari with car-like user-friendliness of the Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager....
 / Mercury Vanster were introduced for the 1985 model year with FR layout.

A European minivan design was conceived in the late 1970s by the Rootes Group
Rootes

The Rootes Group was a British automobile manufacturer, which was based in the English Midlands and south of England. Rootes was the parent company of many well-known British marques, including Hillman, Humber , Singer , Sunbeam Car Company, Talbot, Commer and Karrier....
 in partnership with the French automaker Matra (which was also affiliated with Simca
Simca

Simca was a France automaker and marque, founded in 1934 by Henri Th?odore Pigozzi . Simca was originally affiliated with Fiat, but later, after a period of independence, when Simca bought Ford's French branch, became increasingly controlled by the Chrysler, in 1970 becoming a part of Chrysler Europe and a brand rather than independent compa...
, the former French subsidiary of the Chrysler Corporation, sold in 1977 to the PSA Group). The Matra design was originally intended to be sold as a Talbot
Talbot

Talbot is an automobile brand, whose history is one of the industry's most complex....
 and be a replacement for the Talbot-Matra Rancho
Matra Rancho

The Matra Rancho is a leisure activity vehicle created by the France engineering group Matra in cooperation with the automaker Simca to capitalize on the off-road trend started by the Range Rover, but provide the "off-road look" at a lower price....
. Early prototypes were designed to use Simca parts and a grille like the Simca 1307
Simca 1307

The Simca 1307 was the name under which Chrysler Europe launched its new large family car in 1975. A modern, front-wheel drive hatchback, it was one of the first such cars in that class, along with the Volkswagen Passat, and became the 1976 European Car of the Year....
. Matra took their idea to Peugeot
Peugeot

Peugeot is a major France automobile brand, part of PSA Peugeot Citro?n. Its parent company PSA Peugeot Citro?n is the second largest carmaker in Europe, behind Volkswagen....
, who thought it too expensive and risky, so the project was then presented to Renault
Renault

Renault S.A. is a French automaker producing cars, vans, buses, tractors, and trucks. Due to its alliance with Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., it is currently the world's 4th largest automaker.It owns the Romanian automaker Dacia and the Korean automaker Renault Samsung Motors....
, becoming the Renault Espace
Renault Espace

The Renault Espace is a large MPV from French car-maker Renault. Generations 1-3 were sold under the Renault brand but manufactured by Matra. The current fourth generation model, which seats seven passengers, was designed and is built by Renault; the Renault Grand Espace is a long-wheelbase version with increased rear leg room and boot...
 introduced in 1984. The Renault had traditional hinged car doors on both sides. Chrysler had also been developing a minivan based on the Chrysler K platform
Chrysler K platform

The Chrysler Corporation's K-cars were compact-to-midsize cars designed to carry six adults on two bench seats and were aimed not only to replace Chrysler's nominally-compact Chrysler F platform Aspen and Volar?, but also to compete with midsize car like the Chevrolet Malibu and Ford Fairmont....
, releasing the boxy Dodge Caravan
Dodge Caravan

Chrysler introduced the Dodge Caravan minivan along with its badge engineering variant, the Plymouth Voyager in November 1983, for the 1984 model year — followed by the Dodge Grand Caravan and Plymouth Grand Voyager long-wheelbase models in 1987, the badge engineering Chrysler Town and Country in 1990, and the Volkswagen Ro...
 / Plymouth Voyager
Plymouth Voyager

The original Plymouth Voyager was a twin of the Dodge B-series van from 1974 to 1983. Beginning in 1984 the Voyager name was applied to a new vehicle based on the Plymouth Reliant car....
 earlier than the Espace, in 1983.

Since no one disputes that the Renault Espace is a minivan, despite its door configuration, this raises the question of whether the 1956 Fiat 600 Multipla was actually the first minivan. Alternatively, the Lloyd LT500/LT600, introduced in 1952 could be considered the first minivan.

Minivans by market


North America

Shortly after their arrival, the Chrysler minivans
Chrysler minivans

Sorry, no overview for this topic
 competed against the truck-based front-engine, rear drive Chevrolet Astro
Chevrolet Astro

The Chevrolet Astro was a rear-wheel drive minivan introduced by Chevrolet in 1985 to rival domestic competitors the Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager twins and the Japanese Toyota Van....
, GMC Safari
Chevrolet Astro

The Chevrolet Astro was a rear-wheel drive minivan introduced by Chevrolet in 1985 to rival domestic competitors the Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager twins and the Japanese Toyota Van....
 (based on a reworked 1st generation S-10 platform), and Ford Aerostar
Ford Aerostar

The Ford Aerostar was Ford Motor Company first minivan, and was introduced as a 1986 model in summer 1985. The Aerostar was unique since it combined the trucklike rear-wheel drive and towing capacity of the Chevrolet Astro/GMC Safari with car-like user-friendliness of the Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager....
 (based on a reworked 1st-generation Ranger platform). Utilizing the transverse-mounted engine, front-wheel drive, uni-body construction and "one-box" design, the Chrysler minivans
Chrysler minivans

Sorry, no overview for this topic
 offered better fuel-economy, traction, size, and driving characteristics. Nissan and Mitsubishi
Mitsubishi

The , Mitsubishi Group of Companies, or Mitsubishi Companies is a Japanese Conglomerate consisting of a range of autonomous businesses which share the Mitsubishi brand, trademark and legacy....
 also introduced minivans to North America
North America

North America is the northern continent of the Americas, situated in the Earth's northern hemisphere and almost totally in the western hemisphere....
; but like the Toyota Van Wagon
Toyota Van

The Toyota Van was a vehicle produced by Toyota and distributed worldwide in a multitude of versions. The 'Van' was a slightly larger version of the Toyota LiteAce/Toyota TownAce....
, they had poor rear drive traction, had a bouncy ride due to the short wheelbase
Wheelbase

In both road and rail vehicles, the wheelbase is the distance between the centers of the front and rear wheels....
, and one had to exit the vehicle to walk from the front seats to the back seats.

1989 brought Japan's
Japan

Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, People's Republic of China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south....
 first attempt at a North American-style minivan, with the Mazda MPV
Mazda MPV

The Mazda MPV is a minivan manufactured by Mazda. Introduced in 1989 as a rear wheel drive model, it was replaced in 2000 with a front wheel drive version....
, featuring a swing-out door with roll-down windows — and was the first Japanese minivan with a front engine. It did not have the utility, traction, or cargo room of other minivans.

General Motors
General Motors

General Motors Corporation , founded in 1908, is the world's second-largest automaker after Toyota, ranked by 2008 global unit sales. GM was the global sales leader for 77 consecutive calendar years from 1931 to 2008....
 introduced the Chevrolet Lumina APV
Chevrolet Lumina APV

The Chevrolet Lumina APV was a minivan produced by General Motors for the 1990 to 1996 model years. The Lumina APV was similar to the Pontiac Trans Sport and Oldsmobile Silhouette....
, Oldsmobile Silhouette
Oldsmobile Silhouette

The Oldsmobile Silhouette and its siblings, the Pontiac Trans Sport and Chevrolet Lumina APV , were a trio of minivans that d?buted in late 1989 as 1990 models....
, and Pontiac Trans Sport
Pontiac Trans Sport

The Pontiac Trans Sport and its siblings, the Chevrolet Lumina APV, Oldsmobile Silhouette and Pontiac Montana were a set of minivans that d?buted with radical styling in fall 1989 as 1990 models....
 in 1990. These minivans were their first front-wheel drive
Front-wheel drive

Front-wheel drive is a form of Internal combustion engine/transmission layout used in motor vehicles, where the engine drives the front wheels only....
 minivans; built on a reworked version of GM's 1980's A-platform — with composite plastic body panels, a cab-forward nose, steeply raked windshield
Windshield

The windshield or windscreen of an aircraft, automobile, bus, motorcycle, or tram is the front window. Modern windshields are generally made of Laminated glass, a type of treated glass, which consists of two curved sheets of glass with a plastic layer laminated between them for safety, and are Polyurethaned into the window frame....
s, and deep dashboard
Dashboard

A dashboard, dash, "dial and switch housing", and sometimes fascia is a Control panel located under the windshield of an automobile....
s and.

That same year, Toyota introduced the Previa
Toyota Previa

The Toyota Previa, also known as the Toyota Estima in Japan and the Toyota Tarago in Australia, is an MPV or multi-purpose vehicle produced by Toyota Motor Corporation since 1990....
. The Toyota Previa
Toyota Previa

The Toyota Previa, also known as the Toyota Estima in Japan and the Toyota Tarago in Australia, is an MPV or multi-purpose vehicle produced by Toyota Motor Corporation since 1990....
 had a four-cylinder engine located under the floor of the vehicle, mounted nearly flat on its side, rather than straight up and down like in its predecessor. This allowed passengers to pass from the front seats to the back without exiting the vehicle.

Ford and Nissan introduced models in 1993 with front-wheel drive, the Mercury Villager
Mercury Villager

The Mercury Villager is a minivan related to the Nissan Quest were the products of a joint venture between Ford Motor Company and Nissan. The goal was to produce a smaller and more stylish minivan to compete in the traditional minivan market....
 and Nissan Quest
Nissan Quest

The Nissan Quest is a minivan produced by Nissan since 1993. There have been three generations of this model. The first generation Quest was a collaboration with Ford Motor Company, which marketed a badge engineering variant as the Mercury Villager....
 respectively. These minivans were competitive with their car-based chassis and V6 engines. Ford introduced a slightly larger front-wheel drive minivan (based on a reworked version of the 1980s Taurus platform) called the Windstar
Ford Windstar

The Ford Windstar is a minivan that was produced and sold by the Ford Motor Company from March 1994 to 2003. This front-wheel drive minivan would eventually replace Ford's aging rear-wheel drive Ford Aerostar minivan....
 in 1994.

In 1995 Honda
Honda

is a multinational corporation headquartered in Japan.The company manufactures automobiles, motorcycles, trucks, scooter , robots, jet aircrafts and jet engines, all-terrain vehicle, water craft, electrical generators, marine engines, lawn and garden equipment, and aeronautical and other mobile technologies....
 introduced the Odyssey
Honda Odyssey

The Honda Odyssey, known in Europe as the Honda Shuttle, is a minivan, or "large MPV", produced by the Japanese automaker Honda since 1994....
, based on the Honda Accord
Honda Accord

The Honda Accord is the series of midrange automobiles manufactured by Honda since 1976, and sold in most automotive markets throughout the world....
, and featuring outswing doors with roll-down middle windows, and a rear seat that folded away into the floor.

In 2000, the Chrysler Town & Country and Dodge Caravan
Dodge Caravan

Chrysler introduced the Dodge Caravan minivan along with its badge engineering variant, the Plymouth Voyager in November 1983, for the 1984 model year — followed by the Dodge Grand Caravan and Plymouth Grand Voyager long-wheelbase models in 1987, the badge engineering Chrysler Town and Country in 1990, and the Volkswagen Ro...
 continued as the best selling minivans in North America. The second-best selling minivan was the Honda Odyssey
Honda Odyssey

The Honda Odyssey, known in Europe as the Honda Shuttle, is a minivan, or "large MPV", produced by the Japanese automaker Honda since 1994....
, and the third was the Toyota Sienna
Toyota Sienna

Not to be confused with Toyota Sienta.The Toyota Sienna is a family minivan currently manufactured in the United States by the Japan automaker Toyota for the North American market only, and shares its automobile platform with the Toyota Camry....
. According to Autodata, in 2006 Chrysler, Honda, and Toyota comprised 72% of the United States minivan market. General Motors and Ford made up 17%, Kia Sedona and Hyundai Entourage
Hyundai Entourage

The Hyundai Entourage is a minivan sold by Hyundai Motor Company in the North American market beginning with the 2007 model year. It is based on the Kia Sedona, now in its second generation....
 sales made up 5%, and the Nissan Quest
Nissan Quest

The Nissan Quest is a minivan produced by Nissan since 1993. There have been three generations of this model. The first generation Quest was a collaboration with Ford Motor Company, which marketed a badge engineering variant as the Mercury Villager....
 was 3%. By 2008, most North American minivans had adopted the size and configuration of the long-wheelbase Chrysler vans, with Chrysler dropping their shorter models as well. In 2008, only the Kia Sedona and Chevrolet Uplander offer both short- and long-wheelbase configurations. In 2008, Volkswagen debuted the Routan
Volkswagen Routan

The Volkswagen Routan is a seven-seat minivan and badge engineering variant of the Chrysler RT platform, with revised styling, content features, and suspension tuning from the fifth-generation Dodge Grand Caravan and Chrysler Town & Country....
, a rebadged variant
Badge engineering

Badge engineering is a term that describes the badge of one product as another. Due to the high cost of designing and engineering a totally new model, or establishing a new brand , it is often more cost-effective to rebadge a single product multiple times....
 of the Chrysler RT platform
Chrysler S platform

The Chrysler minivan platform has evolved through five generations, from the original S platform forming the basis of the Dodge Caravan, Plymouth Voyager and Chrysler Town and Country minivans — to the current RT and RM platforms, which underpin the current Dodge Caravan, Chrysler Town and Country, and Volkswagen Routan....
 minivans.
Engines
During the 1980s, North American minivans were slow and under-powered when compared with sport utility vehicles, but had more fuel-efficient four-cylinder engines. Such vehicles could also have poor performance, as manual transmissions were rare in minivans, and often had higher rates of problems than larger engines. Some minivans were notorious for having problems with their transaxle
Transaxle

A transaxle, in the automotive field, is a major mechanical component which combines the functionality of the transmission , the differential and associated components of the driven axle into one integrated assembly....
s, as they are substantially heavier than the sedans their powertrains were originally designed for. With the shift in the 1990s towards heavier, long-wheelbase models and light towing, V6 engines became more common; some automakers dropped their four-cylinder engines from their lineup. The Chevrolet Astro
Chevrolet Astro

The Chevrolet Astro was a rear-wheel drive minivan introduced by Chevrolet in 1985 to rival domestic competitors the Dodge Caravan/Plymouth Voyager twins and the Japanese Toyota Van....
, the last surviving truck-based mid-size van, was popular for towing applications because of its frame and up to 4.3-liter V6, with some owners installing their own V8 engines.

Europe

Apart from the Chrysler Minivans
Chrysler minivans

Sorry, no overview for this topic
, the Renault
Renault

Renault S.A. is a French automaker producing cars, vans, buses, tractors, and trucks. Due to its alliance with Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., it is currently the world's 4th largest automaker.It owns the Romanian automaker Dacia and the Korean automaker Renault Samsung Motors....
 did not have any direct rival during the 1980s. Other mainstream automakers began to develop multi-purpose vehicles designed with European tastes in mind. PSA Peugeot Citroën
PSA Peugeot Citroën

PSA Peugeot Citro?n is a France automobile and motorcycle automobile manufacturer; these are sold under the Peugeot and Citro?n marques. The PSA Peugeot Citro?n is owned by Peugeot S.A....
 and the Fiat Group founded a joint-venture, Sevel, and released in 1994 the eurovan under the nameplates Citroën Evasion, Peugoet 806, Fiat Ulysse and Lancia Zeta. The Ford and the Volkswagen Group
Volkswagen Group

Volkswagen Group, or Volkswagen Aktiengesellschaft , is a German automotive industry group, currently the automotive industry#World's largest vehicle manufacturing groups , and the largest in Europe....
 JV Auto-Europa similarly co-developed models on a common chassis and built them in a shared-plant in Setúbal
Setúbal

Set?bal is a city and a municipalities of Portugal in Portugal with a total area of 172.0 km? and a total population of 118,696 inhabitants in the municipality....
, Portugal
Portugal

Portugal , officially the Portuguese Republic , is a country on the Iberian Peninsula. Located in southwestern Europe, Portugal is the westernmost country of mainland Europe and is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the west and south and by Spain to the north and east....
. The Ford Galaxy
Ford Galaxy

The Ford Galaxy is a large MPV first introduced in 1995....
 (platform code VX-62, and Volkswagen Sharan
Volkswagen Sharan

The Volkswagen Sharan is a large MPV produced by the germany automaker Volkswagen since 1995....
, and later SEAT Alhambra
SEAT Alhambra

The SEAT Alhambra is a Multi-purpose vehicle by the Volkswagen Group and sold under the SEAT brand. It has been on sale since 1996 and, apart from a major restyling in 2000, it is very similar to the original model....
, became available in 1995 and were almost identical in design with only different front ends, rear ends and dashboards. While the VW/Ford model was relatively large, with a length of 4635 mm, the Espace and the eurovan were around 200 mm shorter and would be considered today as compact MPVs. All of them were available as seven-seaters and the seats could be folded and removed. These models would be later called "large MPVs".

The trend towards compact MPV
Compact MPV

A Compact MPV is a car classification used in Europe to describe multi-purpose vehicle versions of small family cars , fitting between the mini MPV and large MPV sub-segments....
s began in 1996 with the launch of the Renault Scénic
Renault Scénic

The Renault Sc?nic is a compact MPV produced by France automaker Renault, the first to be labelled as such in Europe. It is based on the chassis of the Renault M?gane small family car....
 and Opel Zafira
Opel Zafira

The Opel Zafira is a compact MPV produced by KPK and Opel, a General Motors subsidiary. The Zafira is branded as Opel, Vauxhall Motors, Holden and Chevrolet, depending on the market....
. Compact MPVs were cars with tall bodies but based on the chassis and engines of a small family car (in the case of the Scénic, the Renault Mégane
Renault Mégane

The Renault M?gane is a small family car produced by the France automaker Renault since 1995. It is offered in 3- and 5-door hatchback, Saloon , coup?, convertible and station wagon bodystyles....
). The runaway success of the Scénic saw the car spawn a multitude of similar vehicles, like the Opel Zafira
Opel Zafira

The Opel Zafira is a compact MPV produced by KPK and Opel, a General Motors subsidiary. The Zafira is branded as Opel, Vauxhall Motors, Holden and Chevrolet, depending on the market....
, the Citroën Xsara Picasso, the Volkswagen Touran
Volkswagen Touran

The Volkswagen Touran is a compact MPV based on a vertically-stretched fifth generation Volkswagen Golf Mk5, and sold in Europe and other select markets....
, the Ford Focus C-Max
Ford Focus C-MAX

The Ford C-Max is a compact MPV produced by Ford in Saarlouis for the European market since 2003. It was the first to use the Ford C1 platform, also used by the Ford Focus , which was introduced a year later, and the compact MPV Mazda Premacy....
, and the Nissan Almera Tino
Nissan Almera Tino

The Nissan Almera Tino was a compact MPV produced by the Japanese automaker Nissan in its Spanish factory in both petrol and diesel versions. It was based on floorpan of the Nissan Almera small family car and launched in Europe in 2000 and sold until 2006....
. By the mid-2000s, virtually all mainstream automakers in Europe had a compact MPV in their range.

Also in the mid-2000s, automakers began to use MPV-style designs on supermini
Supermini car

A supermini is a British car classification term that describes automobiles larger than a city car but smaller than a small family car. This car class is also known as the B-segment across Europe, and as Subcompact in North America....
-based chassis. Examples of mini MPV
Mini MPV

Mini MPV is a car classification used to describe supermini car or subcompact which have taller build, fitting below the compact MPV and large MPV classifications....
s them are the Opel Meriva
Opel Meriva

The Opel Meriva is a mini MPV based on the platform of the third generation Opel Corsa and sold under that name on all of the European markets with the exception of the United Kingdom, where it is called the Vauxhall Meriva....
, based on the Corsa, the Renault Modus
Renault Modus

The Renault Modus is a mini MPV designed and built by the French automaker Renault in Valladolid, Spain since September 2004. The production version is very similar to the concept car of the same name, which was presented at the 2004 Geneva Motor Show....
, derived from the Clio
Renault Clio

The Renault Clio is a supermini car produced by the France automobile manufacturer Renault. Originally launched in 1990, it is currently in its third generation....
, and the Fiat Idea
Fiat Idea

The Fiat Idea is a mini MPV built by the Italy manufacturer Fiat since 2003. The car is based on the Project 188 platform, originally used for the Fiat Punto#Mark 2....
, derived from the Punto
Fiat Punto

The Fiat Punto is a supermini car produced by the Italy manufacturer, Fiat, since 1993. It is currently in its third generation....
 platform.

In 2000, the Auto-Europa triplets (Galaxy, Sharan and Alhambra) were heavily face-lifted. More recently, Auto-Europa was dissolved when Ford left VW and Seat to make its own Galaxy sharing many parts with the Ford S-MAX
Ford S-MAX

The Ford S-Max is an MPV/sedan produced by the Ford Motor Company for the European market and by Chang'an Ford Automobile Co., Ltd for the Chinese market....
, another MPV.

Engines

European Minivans (MPVs) are generally powered by four-cylinder engines, originally a mix of petrol and diesel units, but with petrol engines becoming increasingly rare as diesels have improved. V6 engines are rare, due to the increased fuel consumption of larger engines being considered unacceptable with high fuel prices.

Asia

In the ASEAN nations, China
China

China is a Culture of China, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or multinational entity extending over a large area in East Asia....
 and India
India

India, officially the Republic of India , is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, the List of countries by population country, and the most populous liberal democracy in the world....
, multi-utility vehicles tend to be smaller than North America
North America

North America is the northern continent of the Americas, situated in the Earth's northern hemisphere and almost totally in the western hemisphere....
n minivans and Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
an MPVs. Compact MUVs are more popular than models of other sizes.

They also differ in that they need to cope with uneven terrain as opposed to paved highway
Highway

A highway is a main road intended for travel by the public between important destinations, such as city and towns. Highway designs vary widely and can range from a two-lane road without margins to a multi-lane, grade separated freeway....
s. Models from local manufacturers are usually based on Japan
Japan

Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, People's Republic of China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south....
ese designs from Suzuki
Suzuki

is a multinational corporation headquartered in Hamamatsu, Japan that specializes in manufacturing compact automobiles, a full range of motorcycles, All-terrain vehicle, outboard motor, wheelchairs and a variety of other small internal combustion engines....
, Daihatsu and Toyota. Popular models include Toyota Picnic, Toyota Previa
Toyota Previa

The Toyota Previa, also known as the Toyota Estima in Japan and the Toyota Tarago in Australia, is an MPV or multi-purpose vehicle produced by Toyota Motor Corporation since 1990....
, Mazda 8
Mazda MPV

The Mazda MPV is a minivan manufactured by Mazda. Introduced in 1989 as a rear wheel drive model, it was replaced in 2000 with a front wheel drive version....
 and Honda StepWGN
Honda Stepwgn

The Honda Step wgn is a mid-sized MPV produced by Honda since 1996. It is designed with a higher cabin, contrast to the Honda Odyssey and later also the Honda Stream in the product line....
.

MUVs vary widely in configuration: whilst some MUVs might be replicas of European MPVs (such as the European Ford Fusion) or American-style minivans (like the Toyota Innova
Toyota Innova

The Toyota Innova is a toyota designed MPV i.e. being less than in length as per the European system of size classification, produced in Indonesia under supervision by Toyota since 2003....
), in some cases MUVs are similar to SUVs (such as the Chevrolet Tavera
Chevrolet Tavera

The Chevrolet Tavera is a compact MPV produced in Indonesia by Japanese automaker Isuzu Motors and in India by American automaker General Motors sold in ASEAN and Indian markets....
).

Other examples of MUVs are the Maruti Versa
Maruti Versa

The Maruti Versa is a microvan produced by Maruti Udyog Limited and sold in India since October 2001. The Versa is a clone of the now discontinued Suzuki Every Landy....
, Isuzu Panther
Isuzu Panther

The Isuzu Panther is a multi-purpose vehicle manufactured in Indonesia for the Asian market by Isuzu Motors. The model is suited to carrying large loads of passengers or cargo....
, Toyota Avanza
Toyota Avanza

The Toyota Avanza is an Indonesian designed mini MPV produced in Indonesia and also assembled in Malaysia, with supervision from Toyota, who also sell the car under their Daihatsu brand....
, Hindustan Pushpak, Toyota Qualis and Toyota Innova
Toyota Innova

The Toyota Innova is a toyota designed MPV i.e. being less than in length as per the European system of size classification, produced in Indonesia under supervision by Toyota since 2003....
.

See also

  • List of van models
    Van

    A van is a kind of vehicle used for transporting goods or groups of people. It is usually a box-shaped vehicle on four wheels, about the same width and length as a large automobile, but taller and usually higher off the ground, also referred to as a light commercial vehicle or LCV....
  • Chrysler Minivans
    Chrysler minivans

    Sorry, no overview for this topic
  • Car body styles
  • Mini MPV
    Mini MPV

    Mini MPV is a car classification used to describe supermini car or subcompact which have taller build, fitting below the compact MPV and large MPV classifications....
  • Compact MPV
    Compact MPV

    A Compact MPV is a car classification used in Europe to describe multi-purpose vehicle versions of small family cars , fitting between the mini MPV and large MPV sub-segments....
  • Crossover SUV
    Crossover SUV

    A crossover — variously called CUV or crossover utility vehicle — is a marketing term for a vehicle that derives from a car automobile platform while borrowing features from an Sport utility vehicle or Minivan....
  • Leisure activity vehicle
    Leisure activity vehicle

    A leisure activity vehicle is a small van, generally related to a supermini car or subcompact car, with two or three seat rows, and a large, tall car boot and tailgate....
  • Station wagon
    Station wagon

    A station wagon in American English, Australian English, Canadian English and New Zealand English usage and an estate car in British English usage, is a passenger automobile with a car body style similar to a sedan but with the roofline following the full, sometimes extended rear cargo area, i.e. ending with a more vertical door...


External links