Irish Car of the Year | |
---|---|
Sponsored by | Continental Tyres |
Country | Ireland |
First awarded | 1978 |
Last awarded | 2024 |
Winner | Hyundai Ioniq 6 |
Website | www |
The Continental Tyres Irish Car of the Year award was established in 1978 based on similar Car of the Year awards. It is organised and judged by the Motoring Media Association of Ireland (MMAI), comprising journalists across the country. The award was initially sponsored by Semperit and more recently by Semperit's owners, Continental Tyres.
The awards have eleven categories: Irish Car of the Year (overall winner), Compact Car, Medium Car, Large Car, Compact SUV, Medium SUV, Large SUV, Green/Efficient Car, Performance/Luxury Car, Hot Hatchback, and, since 2019, MPV. [1]
Ford has won the competition eight times, with the Ford Mondeo winning the overall title the most times for an individual model. The winner for 2023 was the Volkswagen ID. Buzz. [2] The awards ceremony is usually held each November in Dublin, with the awards presented for the following year. The awards ceremony for 2023 was held at the Westin Dublin Hotel. [3]
Cars are assessed by a jury of 34 of the most experienced motoring journalists in Ireland. Each jury member road tests every car individually on the following criteria: [4]
The first winner of the award was the Volkswagen Golf Diesel, which debuted four years after the regular Volkswagen Golf.
The Ford Mondeo is the only model to have won the title three times, in 1994, 2008 and 2016. [5] It was beaten into second place in 2001 by the Renault Laguna. [6]
The 2023 winner was the Volkswagen ID. Buzz with the van version, the ID. Buzz Cargo, winning the Irish Van of the Year title. [7] [8]
Year | Irish Car of the Year Winner |
---|---|
1978 | Volkswagen Golf (Diesel) |
1979 | Volkswagen Derby |
1980 | Fiat Ritmo |
1981 | Datsun Stanza |
1982 | Ford Escort |
1983 | Ford Sierra |
1984 | Fiat Uno |
1985 | Opel Kadett |
1986 | Ford Granada |
1987 | Fiat Croma |
1988 | Toyota Corolla |
1989 | Fiat Tipo |
1990 | Renault 19 |
1991 | Fiat Tempra |
1992 | Opel Astra |
1993 | Toyota Carina E |
1994 | Ford Mondeo |
1995 | Opel Omega |
1996 | Volkswagen Polo |
1997 | Peugeot 406 |
1998 | Citroën Xsara |
1999 | Ford Focus |
2000 | Toyota Yaris |
2001 | Opel Corsa |
2002 | Renault Laguna [9] |
2003 | Mazda6 [10] |
2004 | Toyota Avensis [11] |
2005 | Ford Focus [12] |
2006 | Suzuki Swift [13] |
2007 | Honda Civic [14] |
2008 | Ford Mondeo [15] |
2009 | Citroën C5 [16] |
2010 | Peugeot 3008 [17] |
2011 | Nissan Juke [18] |
2012 | Kia Rio [19] |
2013 | BMW 3 Series (F30) [20] |
2014 | Citroën C4 Picasso [21] |
2015 | Nissan Qashqai [22] |
2016 | Ford Mondeo [23] |
2017 | Mercedes-Benz E-Class [24] |
2018 | Peugeot 3008 [25] |
2019 | Volvo XC40 [26] |
2020 | Kia e-Soul [27] |
2021 | not held |
2022 | Kia EV6 [28] |
2023 | Volkswagen ID. Buzz [29] |
Brand | Award no. | Models | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ford | 8 | Escort (1982) | Sierra (1983) | Granada (1986) | Mondeo (1994) | Focus (1999) | Focus (2005) | Mondeo (2008) | Mondeo (2016) |
Fiat | 5 | Ritmo (1980) | Uno (1984) | Croma (1987) | Tipo (1989) | Tempra (1991) | |||
Opel | 4 | Kadett (1985) | Astra (1992) | Omega (1995) | Corsa (2001) | ||||
Toyota | 4 | Corolla (1988) | Carina (1993) | Yaris (2000) | Avensis (2004) | ||||
Volkswagen | 4 | Golf (1978) | Derby (1979) | Polo (1996) | ID. Buzz (2023) | ||||
Citroën | 3 | Xsara (1998) | C5 (2009) | C4 Picasso (2014) | |||||
Peugeot | 3 | 406 (1997) | 3008 (2010) | 3008 (2018) | |||||
Kia | 3 | Rio (2012) | e-Soul (2020) | EV6 (2022) | |||||
Nissan | 2 | Juke (2011) | Qashqai (2015) | ||||||
Renault | 2 | 19 (1990) | Laguna (2002) | ||||||
BMW | 1 | F30 (2013) | |||||||
Datsun | 1 | Stanza (1981) | |||||||
Honda | 1 | Civic (2007) | |||||||
Mazda | 1 | 6 (2003) | |||||||
Mercedes | 1 | E-Class (2017) | |||||||
Suzuki | 1 | Swift (2006) | |||||||
Volvo | 1 | XC40 (2019) |
Volkswagen is a German automobile manufacturer based in Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony, Germany. Established in 1937 by the German Labour Front under the Nazi Party, it was revitalized into the global brand it is today after World War II by British Army officer Ivan Hirst. The company is well known for its iconic Beetle and serves as the flagship marque of the Volkswagen Group, which became the world's largest automotive manufacturer by global sales in 2016 and 2017.
The Ford Mondeo is a car manufactured by Ford since 1993. The first Ford model declared as a "world car", the Mondeo was intended to consolidate several Ford model lines worldwide. The Mondeo nameplate is derived from the Latin word mundus, meaning "world". For its first two generations, the Mondeo was produced using the CDW27 platform, with the third-generation model shifting to the EUCD platform. The fourth-generation models use the CD4 platform, and the fifth-generation use the C2 platform.
The European Car of the Year (ECOTY) award is an international Car of the Year award established in 1964 by a collective of automobile magazines from different countries in Europe. The current organising companies of the award are Auto (Italy), Autocar, Autopista (Spain), Autovisie (Netherlands), L'Automobile Magazine (France), Stern (Germany) and Vi Bilägare (Sweden).
The Ford Fiesta is a supermini car that was marketed by Ford from 1976 to 2023 over seven generations. Over the years, the Fiesta has mainly been developed and manufactured by Ford's European operations, and had been positioned below the Escort.
The Volkswagen Sharan is a seven-seater minivan that was produced by the German Volkswagen Group and built at the AutoEuropa plant in Palmela, Portugal, with a front-wheel-drive version across two generations, from 1995 to 2022. Through badge engineering, the Volkswagen Sharan shares the same platform with the SEAT Alhambra, and the first generation was also in most respects identical to the Ford Galaxy. From 2010 to 2023 the Sharan was in its second generation. It is described in the motor industry as a multi-purpose vehicle (MPV).
Wheels Car of the Year is an annual automotive Car of the Year award presented by Wheels magazine. The publisher claims that it is the world's oldest continuous motoring award of its kind. The award is given to the best newly released vehicle each year.
The Motor Trend Car of the Year (COTY) is an annual Car of the Year award given by Motor Trend magazine to recognize the best new or significantly refreshed car in a given model year.
The Ford Galaxy is a seven-seater car produced by Ford of Europe from June 1995 to April 2023. Considered in the motor industry to be a large multi-purpose vehicle (MPV), it was the first Ford-brand MPV produced and marketed outside of North America, the model line is currently in its third generation. Sharing its platform architecture with the Ford Mondeo, the Galaxy was developed alongside the Ford S-Max; the model line is slotted between the Connect and Custom variants of the Ford Tourneo/Transit model family.
The Los Angeles Auto Show, also known as the LA Auto Show, is an auto show held annually at the Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles, California, United States. It is open to the public for ten days, filling 760,000 square feet (71,000 m2) of exhibit space. Since 2006 the event is held in November or December.
The Green Car of the Year is a Car of the Year award from the Green Car Journal. The winner is selected by an 11-member panel comprising automotive and environmental experts. Invited jurors have included Mario Andretti; Carroll Shelby, Jay Leno, Carl Pope, Christopher Flavin, Jonathan Lash and Jean-Michel Cousteau.
What Car? is a British monthly automobile magazine and website, currently edited by Steve Huntingford and published by Haymarket Media Group. Other team members include deputy editor Darren Moss and test editors Will Nightingale, Neil Winn, Lawrence Cheung, and Dan Jones. The used car editors are Mark Pearson and Oliver Young. The consumer editor is Claire Evans.
This article 1993 in motoring deals with developments in the automotive industry that occurred throughout the year 1993 by various automobile manufacturers, grouped by country. The automotive industry designs, develops, manufactures, markets, and sells motor vehicles.
Ford of Europe GmbH is a subsidiary company of Ford Motor Company founded in 1967 in Cork, Ireland, with headquarters in Cologne, Germany.
The D-segment is the 4th category of the European segments for passenger cars, and is described as "large cars".
The Volkswagen Amarok is a pickup truck produced by Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles since 2010. It is a body-on-frame truck with double-wishbone suspension at the front and leaf springs at the rear. The Amarok range consists of single cab and double cab, combined with either rear-wheel drive or 4motion four-wheel-drive, and is powered by turbocharged petrol or turbocharged direct injection (TDI) diesel engines.
The Peugeot 3008 is a compact crossover SUV manufactured and marketed by Peugeot. It was first presented to the public in Dubrovnik, Croatia in 2008, and then again in 2010 at the Mondial de l'Automobile in Paris, by the French manufacturer Peugeot. It was launched in April 2009 as the successor to the Peugeot 4007 and Peugeot 4008, and it fills a gap in Peugeot's model lineup between the Peugeot 308, with which it shares its platform, and the Peugeot 5008, its larger counterpart. The second-generation model, which is based on an EMP2 platform first seen on the second-generation Peugeot 308, was launched in 2016, with the vehicle being available as of January 2017. Originally, the Peugeot 3008 was developed with the Peugeot 5008, and as of February 2019, the 3008 was developed together with the Citroën C5 Aircross, DS 7 Crossback and the Opel Grandland, sharing platforms and engines.
The Ford Mondeo Mk IV (third generation), codenamed CD345 was officially unveiled in five-door production form by Ford in late 2006. Based on the EUCD platform developed with Volvo, the platform was the same as that used in the new large MPVs Galaxy and S-MAX, but not the North American Ford Fusion or the Mazda Atenza in Japan. It was also used for several Volvos starting with the Volvo S80 II.
The fourth generation of the Ford Mondeo, is a range of mid-size cars produced by Ford from 2013 to 2022. Developed under the model code CD391, it is a rebadged variant of the American-market Fusion sold in Europe, Latin America, China and Australia. Revealed at the 2012 North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan, the Mondeo is based on a new iteration of Ford's C/D platform, which it shares with the Galaxy and S-Max large MPVs. The Fusion had started production in 2012, which was about one year before the Mondeo had. At its launch, it served as the flagship model for Ford's lineup in China, and was tested on Chinese roads in 2013.
The Volkswagen Group MEB platform is a modular car platform for electric cars developed by the Volkswagen Group and its subsidiaries. It is used in models of Audi, Cupra, Škoda, and Volkswagen, along with Ford through partnership. The architecture is aimed to "consolidate electronic controls and reduce the number of microprocessors, advance the application of new driver-assistance technology and somewhat alter the way cars are built" by the VW Group.
China Car of the Year is an award presented to the winning car launched in China during the course of the year. The first year of the awards was 2014. It is judged by an independent panel made up of automotive journalists and experts. Along with the most prestigious “Car of the Year” award, there are additional categories including SUV of the year, Green car of the year, Performance car of the year, and Design of the year.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help){{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help)