Small, cheap, and weird: A history of the microcar

Tiny EVs come of age again in the third microcar renaissance.

May 28, 2024 - 04:30
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Small, cheap, and weird: A history of the microcar
Small, cheap, and weird: A history of the microcar

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

European car manufacturers are currently tripping over themselves to figure out how personal transport and "last mile" solutions will look in the years to come. The solutions are always electric, and they're also tiny. What most companies (bar Citroen, Renault, and Fiat) seem to have forgotten is that we've had an answer to this problem all along: the microcar.

The microcar is a singular little thing—its job is to frugally take one person (or maybe two people) where they need to go while taking up as little space as possible. A few have broken their way into the public consciousness—Top Gear made a global megastar of Peel's cars, BMW's Isetta remains a design icon, and the Messerschmitt KR200 is just plain cool—but where did these tiny wonders come from? And do they have a future?

Well, without the microcar's predecessors, we may not have the modern motorcar as we know it. Sort of.

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