New Skoda Superb styling lines emerge ahead of launch

As expected, the new Superb looks very much like a larger Octavia with detailing and some of the sleek styling of the Vision C concept shown at Geneva in February

Sketch of the new Skoda Superb
Sketch of the new Skoda Superb

Skoda this week unveiled the new Superb in heavily disguised prototype form, but this sketch image, which surfaced on a Czech website, is apparently the real thing and shows off the new Superb’s styling pretty accurately.

As expected, it looks very much like a larger Octavia with detailing and some of the sleek styling of the Vision C concept shown at Geneva in February. Hardly a shock, then, but the styling of the new Superb will be key to moving it up a notch from the current model’s ugly-but-practical image.

The new Superb will have some seriously heavy lifting to do as Skoda continues with its ambition to sell more than 1.5-million cars a year. While it’s well on the way to doing so (2014 saw Skoda make and sell 1-million cars for the first time) there’s still a long way to go.

The new Superb will have to sell as many units in its lifetime as the first two generations of Superb (from 2002 to today) have managed - roughly 700,000 sales.

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It’s that pitch towards the business sector that will define this new Superb. Underneath the skin lies the now-ubiquitous Volkswagen Group MQB platform, but the Superb will be the biggest car yet to make use of it - larger even than the new VW Passat.

While the emphasis is on comfort and practically (with a massive 625-litre boot) the Superb will also have a long list of high-end options including headlights that dip themselves and a massive 8-inch touchscreen with Apple CarPlay integrated into the electronics.

Engines will range from a basic 1.4-litre TSI petrol turbo with cylinder cutoff to a range-topping 190hp 2.0-litre TDI diesel with four-wheel-drive and a possible high-perofrmance model using the 280bhp 2.0-litre turbo petrol from the Seat Leon Cupra.

The new Superb will be unveiled at the end of February in Prague before getting a full public debut at the Geneva motor show.

Neil Briscoe

Neil Briscoe

Neil Briscoe, a contributor to The Irish Times, specialises in motoring