One of the things people love to say about the Audi A2 is that it was ahead of its time. It’s the opinion people seem to hold most about the small Audi.
And I get that: if you pulled the wraps from it today, it would still look modern. In October last year, Audi did just that, when it revealed the A2 E-tron concept restomod to celebrate the car’s 25th anniversary, and it looked as fresh as a piglet.
But if the A2 was ‘ahead of its time’, it must still be a long, long way ahead of its time, because more than a quarter of a century after it was launched, the world is not oversupplied with compact aluminium four-seaters that weigh less than 900kg and measure 3.8m long.
No, instead the family car market is filled with very un-A2ish things: steel, heavy and crossovery. Influentially, and financially, the Audi A2 was a dead end. Audi sold just 176,000 of them globally over five years, at a time when Ford was selling 125,000 Focuses, in the UK alone, every year.
The car that has come closest to following it, spiritually, was perhaps the BMW i3. BMW sold fewer than 25,000 of those a year too.
And yet, and yet. What we once called Audi’s “nearly successful” A2 must have made a cultural impact because, believe me, people do like to talk about it.
I’ve written about thousands of different cars over the years but my inbox has never known anything like the correspondence I’ve received since I bought an A2 in February. I’ve heard from the owners’ club, talked with an owner who also has a McLaren F1, and heard from a guy who owns eight A2s.
My car’s previous owner was grateful I picked it up early, because he didn’t want his mum to visit and see it was going. I still don’t know enough about the A2, but I’m starting to see how it’s adored. And it’s easy to understand why.
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I'd loved the A2 from seeing the concept 25 years ago and eventually bought an almost identical one to Matt's, same colour and complete with missing centre caps and sagging glove box handle almost a decade ago for £950. I adored its tardis like interior and general engineering cleverness, it suited my needs perfectly. I wish I had never sold it.
I now, with a few conventional cars inbetween, have an BMW i3, which I love for very similar reasons, also since its conecpt was unveiled. It seems I have 'a type'. Many i3 owners are past A2 owners for similar reasons. I cant imagine what I would repeat it with, I need another company to make an ultra efficient (in packaging and fuel), engineering masterpiece/folly small car.
Saw one yesterday ,first one in ages,it looked so dated,too tall too narrow looking, there stuff on sale now that do it better but I guess if you like them then you'll put up with there quirks.