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− | [[Holden]] entered the supermini stakes in 1983, at a time when it looked like the traditional large car was dead. Therefore, General Motors–Holden’s Pty. Ltd. began looking around the company’s various outposts to see what was available. [[Suzuki]], cooperating with GM on several products, supplied the original Holden Barina: a rebadged [[Suzuki Cultus]]. In the 1990s, GM decided to look within its own empire, sourcing the [[Opel Corsa B]] from Spain for Australia and New Zealand and rebadging it. Citing cost issues, the fifth-generation Barina was a rebadged [[Daewoo Kalos]] (a car that was deleted from the Australian market some years before as a flop), with the Gentra sedan sold in Australia under the nameplate as well. Critics pointed out the Kalos scored two stars in safety tests versus the [[Opel Corsa C]]’s four, something that might be remedied in the early 2010s as Corsa and Gentra development is brought together. | + | [[Holden]] entered the supermini stakes in 1983, at a time when it looked like the traditional large car was dead. Therefore, General Motors–Holden’s Pty. Ltd. began looking around the company’s various outposts to see what was available. [[Suzuki]], cooperating with GM on several products, supplied the original Holden Barina: a rebadged [[Suzuki Cultus]]. In the 1990s, GM decided to look within its own empire, sourcing the [[Opel Corsa B]] from Spain for Australia and New Zealand and rebadging it. Citing cost issues, the fifth-generation Barina was a rebadged [[Daewoo Kalos]] (a car that was deleted from the Australian market some years before as a flop), with the Gentra sedan sold in Australia under the nameplate as well. Critics pointed out the Kalos scored two stars in safety tests versus the [[Opel Corsa C]]’s four, something that might be remedied in the early 2010s as Corsa and Gentra development is brought together. In 2010, an extra model line was marketed as the Barina: the smaller Daewoo Matiz became the Holden Barina Spark, a sub-line sitting below the Gentra-based models. |
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| *[[Suzuki Cultus (1983–8)]] | | *[[Suzuki Cultus (1983–8)]] |
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| *[[Daewoo Kalos]] | | *[[Daewoo Kalos]] |
| *[[Daewoo Gentra]] | | *[[Daewoo Gentra]] |
| + | *[[Daewoo Matiz (M300)]] |
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Revision as of 12:19, 5 February 2011
Holden entered the supermini stakes in 1983, at a time when it looked like the traditional large car was dead. Therefore, General Motors–Holden’s Pty. Ltd. began looking around the company’s various outposts to see what was available. Suzuki, cooperating with GM on several products, supplied the original Holden Barina: a rebadged Suzuki Cultus. In the 1990s, GM decided to look within its own empire, sourcing the Opel Corsa B from Spain for Australia and New Zealand and rebadging it. Citing cost issues, the fifth-generation Barina was a rebadged Daewoo Kalos (a car that was deleted from the Australian market some years before as a flop), with the Gentra sedan sold in Australia under the nameplate as well. Critics pointed out the Kalos scored two stars in safety tests versus the Opel Corsa C’s four, something that might be remedied in the early 2010s as Corsa and Gentra development is brought together. In 2010, an extra model line was marketed as the Barina: the smaller Daewoo Matiz became the Holden Barina Spark, a sub-line sitting below the Gentra-based models.
Marque: Holden