This is the Cadillac ATS, the brand’s first foray into the entry-level compact saloon segment since the truly horrid Cadillac Cimarron of the early 1980s.
Cadillac is working up a wide range of new offerings — including an all-new flagship based on the delicious Ciel concept — but this down-market saloon is the product likely to provide the foundation for any Cadillac comeback.
Cadillac still sees itself as the ‘standard of the world’, although that really hasn’t described Cadillac since the days of its finned land yachts. But after years watching its European (primarily German) competitors redefine the luxury segment, Caddy is finally determined to challenge the status quo. Could this be the car to do just that?
The new ATS isn’t a badge-engineered Chevrolet but a handsome, surprisingly competent saloon largely achieving everything it set out to do. Its biggest flaw is the image of the Cadillac brand itself.
The look of the ATS will be familiar to anyone who has followed Cadillac since the CTS introduced us to the Art and Science design language a decade ago. Though 215mm shorter than that car, the compact model maintains the basic angular look, albeit a little less edgy and slab-sided than its bigger brother. There is also a swooping coupé which is up against the BMW 4 Series and Audi A5.
Perhaps the most notable detail is the fact that the ATS weighs in at just 1530kg for the base 2.5-litre car. That's substantially less than the CTS and nearly 68kg under the BMW 330i, despite being within 25mm of the Bavarian sedan’s dimensions in every direction.