Skip to main content

After a 54-year slumber, Borgward will show a new SUV in Frankfurt

It’s been a fantastic year for fans of defunct European automakers. Renault’s Alpine division showed a close-to-production concept last month at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, England’s TVR announced plans to launch four new sports cars, and Jensen is on track to introduce a new Interceptor next year.

Germany’s Borgward is making a surprising comeback after spending 54 years in the history books, and the car maker will present a brand new model at the biennial Frankfurt Motor Show. Details are still few and far between, but a handful of teaser images give us a preview of what we can expect from it.

Recommended Videos

The yet-unnamed SUV will be billed as an “affordable premium” off-roader, and it will be roughly the same size as a Mercedes-Benz GLE-Class. That’s about all we know at this point because the company’s two teaser images do such a good job of hiding the SUV’s overall lines.

The first Borgward of the 21st century was penned by former Saab design boss Einar Hareide, and it will usher in the design language that will influence every one of the company’s subsequent models. It will ride on a highly modular platform, though whether it was designed in-house or borrowed from another automaker is an open question.

Relaunching a brand is easier said than done. Borgward’s unexpected resurrection is being spearheaded by Christian Borgward, the grandson of company founder Carl F. W. Borgward, and Karl-Heinz Knöss, an industry veteran who has previously worked for both Saab and Daimler. Additionally, the project is at least partially funded by the deep pockets of Beiqi Foton Motors, one of the biggest manufacturers of commercial vehicles in China.

There’s a good chance you’ve never heard of Borgward before, but executives predict the Stuttgart-based company will return to being a household name in the next few years. Borgward is hoping to build up a full lineup of cars and crossovers at the impressive rate of two new models a year, and it ambitiously aims to sell 800,000 cars a year by 2020 before reaching 1.6 million units annually just five years later. That’s ambitious to say the least, but seeing will be believing.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
New benchmarks show Intel Arc GPU may not be a lost cause after all
Intel Arc Alchemist reference design render.

Ever since it was quietly released, the Intel Arc A380 discrete GPU has mostly collected unfavorable reviews. Although early benchmarks were promising, testing the GPU in real-world gaming scenarios revealed that it can't even keep up with the entry-level AMD Radeon RX 6400.

Bit now there's information that comes directly from the source: Intel revealed the official data for the A380 GPU, including benchmarks and specifications. With some honest insight into the actual performance of the GPU, things are starting to look a little less bleak for the Intel A380.

Read more
NASA’s new moon rocket to depart launchpad after failed test
NASA's SLS rocket on its way to the launchpad.

NASA has decided to pause plans for a wet dress rehearsal involving its next-generation lunar rocket after a slew of issues over the last couple of weeks conspired to derail efforts.

The space agency said it wants to make some repairs, as well as assess the current situation, and will therefore roll the powerful SLS moon rocket and Orion spacecraft from the launchpad back to the Vehicle Assembly Building at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Read more
Tesla fly-through video shows off new Giga Berlin factory
Inside Tesla's Giga Berlin factory.

A new drone video features a high-speed tour of Tesla’s first European car factory, which opened to much fanfare in March.

The stunning drone video (below) zips through multiple locations -- including parts of the assembly line -- inside Tesla’s gleaming facility, which reportedly cost more than $5 billion to build.

Read more