|
Citroën C5 Aircross |
DS 7 Crossback |
Peugeot 3008 II |
Peugeot 5008 II }} |
Petrol: | 1.2 L
EB2DTS turbo I3 | 1.6 L
EP6FDT turbo
I4 |
Petrol PHEV: | 1.6 L
EP6FDT/CDTX turbo I4 |
Diesel: | 1.5 L
DV5 BlueHDi I4 | 1.6 L
DV6F BlueHDi I4 | 2.0 L
DW10 BlueHDi I4 }} | 6-speed
manual | 8-speed
automatic }} | (DV5, DV6) | (EB2DTS) | (EP6FDT, DW10) | (EP6CDTX) }} }} Plans for the Grandland X were known as early as May 2012, before
PSA Peugeot Citroën officially indicated in December of that year that it would build the eventual replacement for the
Zafira. The Grandland X was officially revealed on 18 April 2017 as Opel's flagship crossover SUV and premiered at the
2017 Frankfurt Motor Show. Opel started taking orders for the Grandland X in June 2017 and more than 100,000 orders were made by September 2018. The Grandland I is based on the
PSA EMP2 platform which is shared with related models which include the
Peugeot 3008 II,
Peugeot 5008 II,
DS 7 Crossback and
Citroën C5 Aircross. However, its design intellectual property was registered by
General Motors as the vehicle was developed under its ownership. File:2018_Vauxhall_Grandland_X_Elite_Nav_Turbo_Diesel_1.6_Front.jpg|Vauxhall Grandland X File:Opel_Grandland_X_IMG_0383.jpg|Opel Grandland X (rear) File:Opel_Grandland_X_Leonberg_2019_IMG_0128.jpg|Interior (pre-facelift)
Facelift In June 2021, the Grandland X received a facelift and was renamed to just
Grandland, dropping the 'X' suffix. Changes includes the adoption of Opel's 'Vizor' front fascia (debut on the
Mokka), new
matrix LED lighting technology, a revamped interior with a new dual
touchscreen layout, new
gear selector for the
automatic transmission, and added safety features. File:Opel_Grandland_PHEV_1X7A0396.jpg|Opel Grandland PHEV (facelift) File:Opel_Grandland_Hybrid4_Automesse_Ludwigsburg_2022_1X7A5913.jpg|Opel Grandland PHEV (facelift) File:2023_Vauxhall_Grandland_Ultimate_Turbo_facelift_1.2_Front_(2).jpg|Vauxhall Grandland Ultimate (facelift)
Safety == Second generation (2024) ==