Revealing that the first design sketches are complete and that development is under way, technical development boss Kai Grünitz suggested it will be an obvious successor to the successful city car in its conception and inevitably will share some design elements and attributes.
“The ‘ID 1’ will be close to the Up regarding the usage of that car,” he said. “There aren’t so many possibilities to design a small vehicle for cities in terms of what it looks like. It will be a car that fits into the Volkswagen brand design DNA and functionality DNA but at a lower price.”
He stopped short of categorically confirming the return of the Up badge, but Volkswagen places great value on its longest-running and most successful names. Golf, Passat and Tiguan are all due to be retained in the EV era, with the suggestion that the brand’s numerical naming strategy for its ID EVs could be retired.
Grünitz outlined the importance of bringing such a car to market: “You need a smaller car that’s affordable for the broader customer base. That’s why we’re going for €25,000 for the ID 2all and we’re invested in the development phase for a vehicle below €20,000 – that’s Volkswagen.
“We have to go in that direction to convince our customers that EV is the right way.”
Taking into account Volkswagen’s new 36-month vehicle development timeframe, the ID 1 should break cover before 2027. Indeed, Grünitz said the wraps will come off “several years before the end of this decade”.
Set to be based on a bespoke platform, distinct from the ID 2’s MEB Entry architecture, it will be developed with a rigid focus on keeping costs down, which means it won’t play host to the same levels of advanced autonomy and connectivity functions shared by other, more expensive Volkswagen models.
“You need a car that really fits the customer demands in that price class. You don’t need high-end technology within these cars,” said Grünitz.