A Buick Is in Danger

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

The Buick Cascada, known to Europeans as the Opel Cascada, appeared on North American shores for the 2016 model year, offering buyers (and renters) a pleasant, four-seat replacement for the discontinued Chrysler 200 drop-top.

Now wholly owned by France’s PSA Group, not General Motors, Opel plans to ditch the model once 2019 is up, meaning America stands to lose its last non-sports car convertible. It would also knock the Buick brand down to five models.

Opel announced Tuesday it would stop building the Cascada, introduced in Europe for 2014, after 2019. The Polish-built convertible and two other small cars “will not be replaced after the end of their life cycles,” the company said.

That seems to kibosh the idea that Opel could continue funnelling Cascadas to Buick, even after dropping the model from its own lineup. The newly Frenchified brand plans to go deeper into crossovers and electrification while dropping slower-selling cars, a strategy that seems to be a template followed by every automaker under the sun.

A Buick spokesman contacted by Motor Authority said the brand has nothing to announce about the model’s American future, but did mention that the Cascada remains an important part of the Buick family. The model draws a higher percentage of new customers to the Buick brand than any other model, the spokesman claimed. Still, the model doesn’t bring in a huge volume of buyers.

By far the slowest selling model in Buick’s lineup, Cascada volume fell 25 percent over the first nine months of 2018. A niche car, the Cascada amounted to 2.2 percent of Buick’s 2018 sales, and that’s after rounding up. The first three quarters of 2017 shows a Cascada take rate of 2.8 percent.

While the model was seldom talked about (it offered a single powertrain consisting of a turbocharged 1.6-liter four-cylinder making 200 hp and 207 lb-ft, or 221 lb-ft in overboost mode), it did provide the Buick brand with a point of interest. Something GM’s other divisions — and indeed, those of other Detroit Three automakers — couldn’t claim. Should the model disappear, the brand becomes less interesting than it already is.

[Image: General Motors]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • WallMeerkat WallMeerkat on Oct 10, 2018

    A hodgepodge of old Astra bits with old Insignia/Regal style rear lights. The car the new Saab 9-3 cabrio could've been (and rumour has it that it started off as, before GM got rid of Saab) PSA Peugeot-Citroen are looking to axe all GM platform models and replace the profitable ones with home-grown platformed models. They're also axing the Viva (aka Spark) and Adam small cars, the former likely to be replaced with something on the same line as the 108/C1/Toyota Aygo. As someone who saw Chrysler Europe get snapped up, badge engineered then wound down, it is scarily like history repeating. At least it worked out well for Peugeot, the Horizon (of which the Plymouth / Dodge Omni were similar in the same way as European and US Ford Escorts were vaguely similar...) replacement Arizona became the 309 and gave Peugeot a foothold in the compact family hatchback market, where they are popular to this day - stopping the numbering increment with the last few generations of 308. Keep an eye on the Regal, US and Australia sales aren't living up to expectations (thanks to crossovers and the Kia Stinger...), PSA would be happy enough to either axe the GM platformed Insignia or replace it with a 508-based model.

  • DEVILLE88 DEVILLE88 on Oct 10, 2018

    it's a really nice car.......but that is the stupidest name ever put on an american car.

    • See 1 previous
    • Roberto Esponja Roberto Esponja on Oct 11, 2018

      At least cascada means waterfall or cascade in Spanish. Alero (remember Olds?) meant overhang. Pajero, a Mitsubishi model name, has a "special" meaning in some Hispanic countries. I truly do wonder if companies spend any money anymore on research prior to choosing their model names.

  • Rover Sig 2021 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited, like my previous JGC's cheap to keep (essentially just oil, tires) until recent episode of clunking in front suspension at 50K miles led to $3000 of parts replaced over fives visits to two Jeep dealers which finally bought a quiet front end. Most expensive repair on any vehicle I've owned in the last 56 years.
  • Bob Hey Tassos, have you seen it with top down. It's a permanent roll bar so if it flips no problem. It's the only car with one permanently there. So shoots down your issue. I had a 1998 for 10 years it was perfect, but yes slow. Hardly ever see any of them anymore.
  • 3-On-The-Tree 2007 Toyota Sienna bedsides new plugs, flat tire on I-10 in van Horn Tx on the way to Fort Huachuca.2021 Tundra Crewmax no issues2021 Rav 4 no issues2010 Corolla I put in a alternator in Mar1985 Toyota Land Cruiser FJ60 280,000mi I put in a new radiator back in 08 before I deployed, did a valve job, new fuel and oil pump. Leaky rear main seal, transmission, transfer case. Rebuild carb twice, had a recall on the gas tank surprisingly in 2010 at 25 years later.2014 Ford F159 Ecoboost 3.5L by 80,000mi went through both turbos, driver side leaking, passenger side completely replaced. Rear min seal leak once at 50,000 second at 80,000. And last was a timing chain cover leak.2009 C6 Corvette LS3 Base, I put in a new radiator in 2021.
  • ChristianWimmer 2018 Mercedes A250 AMG Line (W177) - no issues or unscheduled dealer visits. Regular maintenance at the dealer once a year costs between 400,- Euros (standard service) to 1200,- Euros (major service, new spark plugs, brake pads + TÜV). Had one recall where they had to fix an A/C hose which might become loose. Great car and fun to drive and very economical but also fast. Recently gave it an “Italian tune up” on the Autobahn.
  • Bd2 Lexus is just a higher trim package Toyota. ^^
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