Fertile people, pay attention. This is the car for you.
Citroen calls the Grand C4 Picasso a seven-seat MPV, but I
reckon they’re underselling it. This is an eight-seater. The storage bin
between driver and passenger, though presumably designed for diabetes-spec soft
drinks bottles and boiled sweets, is quite large enough to hold at least a
medium-sized child. True, it wouldn’t be hugely comfortable – or hugely safe –
but still more comfortable and safe than transporting your child in a
quadricycle. And, hey, what kid doesn’t want to ride up front?
Citroen calls the
Grand C4 Picasso a seven-seat MPV
The GC4P (as Citroen doesn’t call it) would blanch at the
child-in-a-bin suggestion, you feel. This car cares too much about its
passengers. More than any other MPV on the market, this feels a car designed
from the rear seats, not around the driver. The instrument cluster – housed on
the higher, larger of the two display screens – lives in the middle of the dash
rather than in front of the driver, allowing rear-seat passengers to see by
exactly how much Mum or Dad is breaking the speed limit, while the cabin is
airy enough to induce an agoraphobic attack. Under the glass roof, it is
gloriously glassy in the back: Citroen says the GC4P has an unrivalled 5.7
metres of glazing, which is quite a bit more than my house. Though the rearmost
two seats are small, as they always are on these 5+2s, they’re still big enough
for small people on long journeys, or long people on small journeys. And even
those squeezed into the third row get their own ventilation controls. This
stuff makes small people happy.
This car cares too
much about its passenger
To drive? One-word review: fine. Not great, definitely not
awful, just a respectable seven-seat MPV. It leans a bit if you throw it into a
corner and the manual ’box is a bit sticky, but if you want the option of a
slick-shifting, non-leany car, you should really stop having children. The
Picasso rides well, the 148bhp diesel is strong and frugal and, frankly, what
more do you require?
The Picasso rides
well, the 148bhp diesel is strong and frugal and, frankly, what more do you
require?
Perhaps the Grand Picasso’s only real flaw is that it’s
almost too honest at offering what you need, not want. Just as your watch can
survive a 100-metre deep-sea dive despite you never subjecting it to more than
an energetic bath, so we like the idea that our family car could tackle the
Nürburgring even if it’ll never be tasked with anything dicer than the
Northampton ring road. The GC4P is painfully realistic, and all the better for
it.
Verdict
A seven-seat people carrier that carries seven people, and
does it very well, not sporty, not revolutionary, but best in class.
Technical
specs
·
Price: $42,968
·
Engine: 1997cc 4cyl turbodiesel, FWD, 148bhp, 273lb ft
·
0-62mph: 9.8 secs
·
Top speed: 130mph
·
Economy: 65.7mpg
·
CO2: 113g/km
·
Weight: 1,705kg
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