Skip to main content

New Golf? Nah, this Volkswagen prototype previews fast-charging robots

volkswagen gen e
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Volkswagen’s researchers and engineers are developing electric cars and autonomous technology. The Wolfsburg, Germany-based company has stepped out of the traditional auto show circuit to quietly introduce a prototype called Gen.E which showcases its advances in both areas.

The Gen.E was designed with electrification in mind from the get-go. Unfortunately, Volkswagen isn’t ready to give us the low-down on its newest prototype. They’re showing the car to the public only so that “engineers and scientists in Wolfsburg give a small snapshot of otherwise strictly confidential topics,” according to a statement released online. However, the few morsels of information released by the brand are promising.

Recommended Videos

An electric drivetrain gives the hatchback a range of over 250 miles, which allows it to keep up with cars like the Chevrolet Bolt and the Tesla Model 3. The battery that provides electricity is integrated into the platform so that it won’t get damaged in the event of an accident, while the electric motor has been optimized to provide a blend of efficiency and performance. Whether the platform is in any way related to the modular MEB architecture that Volkswagen is currently developing for production models is up in the air at this point.

Volkswagen Gen.E research vehicle
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Interestingly, one of the secret projects engineers are working on is an autonomous robot that can charge an electric car. Details are again fantastically vague, but the company says it envisions a future where mobile, four-wheeled robots meander through multi-story parking garages to charge electric cars.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

There’s something to be said about the Gen.E’s design, too. Visually, it takes styling cues from the ultra-efficient XL1 built in limited numbers and sold for a supercar-like price a couple of years ago, and pastes those cues on an attractive hatchback body that’s vaguely reminiscent of a Golf or a Polo. The seventh generation of the Golf has been in production since 2012, and we know it’s getting a replacement before the turn of the decade. Naturally, we’re tempted to say the Gen.E might shed a little bit of insight into what the eighth-gen model will look like, but Volkswagen assures us that’s not the case.

“The vehicle itself is actually of secondary relevance, just carrying some technical features related to fast charging. To be clear: any speculation regarding any brand-related production vehicle or intentions of this kind are absolutely without substance,” a company spokesperson told Digital Trends.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
How Volkswagen is taking the Golf GTI into the digital age
2021 Volkswagen GTI

The standard version of the eighth-generation Volkswagen Golf will not be sold in the United States, so the GTI will be positioned as the entry point into the range. That doesn't mean it will become more basic, however. It's actually going in the opposite direction.

Hein Schafer, the company's senior vice president of product marketing and strategy, told me the next GTI will be more advanced and better equipped than the outgoing, seventh-generation model. The performance-related upgrades found under the hood only tell part of the story. The new GTI will also surround you with tech features -- including a few you'd expect to find in cars with a considerably higher price tag.
From analog to digital
"Inside, it is a huge leap forward into digitalization. There is a strong demand for it, and we fulfilled it with our new cockpit architecture," explained Klaus Bischoff, the Volkswagen Group's head of design. He said a new version of the Golf GTI is always challenging because it's such an emblematic model. But that's also what makes the GTI exciting. It's not often a designer has the chance to write the next chapter in a decades-long story like the GTI's.

Read more
Volkswagen’s celebrated Golf GTI returns with more power and new tech
2021 Volkswagen GTI

Previous

Next

Read more
Volkswagen’s friendly looking robot would autonomously charge electric cars
Sketch of Volkswagen's battery wagon

Volkswagens Mobiler Laderoboter | Volkswagen’s Mobile Charging Robot

Volkswagen has created an autonomous charging station on wheels that could make electric car-only parking spots a thing of the past. Deploying smiling, friendly-looking robots in parking structures promises to turn every spot into a charging point.

Read more