The all-new Firenza was introduced in March 1982, as a replacement for the departed
rear-wheel drive Starfire. Initially available as a two-door
hatchback and four-door
sedan, the lineup was expanded to include a 4-door "Cruiser" wagon in 1983, and a two-door
notchback coupe in 1986. The name "Cruiser" was applied to all Oldsmobile
station wagons at the time; this included the
mid-sized
Cutlass Cruiser and
full-size Custom Cruiser. The Firenza was positioned as Oldsmobile's entry-level compact car, priced below the slightly larger
Omega and later
Calais/Cutlass Calais. Despite this, the Firenza could be equipped with premium options such as power windows, power locks, and 14-inch alloy wheels. The 1982 Firenza LX sedan was listed for $8,080 ($ in dollars ). It is named for the Italian translation of the city of
Florence. As a
badge engineered, variant of the
GM J-car platform, the Firenza received its own front and rear-end styling. The upper portion of the Firenza front end featured quad rectangular
headlights separated by signal lights in recessed housings, with a sloped body-color panel between the headlights.
Grille inserts with vertical slats were located below the headlights in the front bumper
fascia. The rear fascia of all but the wagon featured nearly square
taillights with a slight wraparound at the outboard ends of the upper rear panel, while the wagon featured vertically-oriented rectangular taillights (as did the other J-body wagons). The Firenza dashboard assembly was shared only with the Buick Skyhawk, while the Chevrolet Cavalier, Pontiac Sunbird, and Cadillac Cimarron shared a markedly different dashboard assembly. The suspension was shared with the front-wheel-drive Omega and Cutlass Ciera, which consisted of MacPherson struts, lower control arms, coil springs and a stabilizer bar for the front, and a
torsion-beam rear axle, along with coil springs and rear stabilizer bars. The Firenza was launched with a 1.8-liter OHV
inline four-cylinder engine as the sole powerplant, but a Brazilian-built overhead-cam 1.8-liter engine was added during the model year. The displacement of the OHV engine was increased to 2 liters for 1983. Oldsmobile did not utilize a
turbocharger on these engines, while Buick and Pontiac offered a turbocharger on the overhead-cam engine. Wraparound amber turn signal lights were added immediately outboard of the headlights for 1984, while the grille insert was changed to a full-width unit with horizontal slats. In 1985, the 2.8 L
LB6 V6 was added as an option with the GT package. The displacement of the overhead-cam engine increased to 2 liters in 1987. For the Firenza's last model year in 1988, it received a chromed horizontal bar grille between new aerodynamic composite headlamps and new tail lights, styled similar to the
Cutlass Ciera. Also for the Firenza's final year, the hatchback was dropped along with the V6 and the overhead-cam engine, leaving just the four-cylinder OHV engine and notchback coupe, sedan, and wagon models. Also for 1988, all previous trim-level designations were dropped. All Firenza body styles came in a single unnamed base model that could be equipped with six various option packages. Sales of the Cavalier and Sunbird annually dwarfed the Firenza. Due to this, the Firenza was not replaced in Oldsmobile's lineup, leaving the
Cutlass Calais as the division's smallest car. The
Cimarron was discontinued that year as well.
Leeds Assembly, which built the Firenza, was closed. The
Skyhawk lasted another year, while
GM kept the first-generation Sunbird and Cavalier in production until 1994.
Trims and options •
Sedan: • base • 1982–1988 •
LX • 1982–1987 •
Hatchback: •
S • 1982–1987 •
SX • 1982–1985 •
GT • 1983-1987 •
Wagon: •
Cruiser • 1983–1988 •
LX Cruiser • 1983–1985 •
Coupe: • base • 1986–1988 •
LC • 1986–1987 ==GT==