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Alpine Crash Tests Sports Car For A Possible US Debut

  • Alpine is testing the next A110 to U.S. crash standards.
  • The new platform supports electric and combustion power.
  • America buys half of the world’s sports cars today.

American drivers have spent years looking longingly across the Atlantic at the Alpine A110, a lightweight sports coupe widely praised for its razor-sharp handling. Now there’s a tiny hint that the forbidden fruit might finally become available.

Alpine’s CEO revealed this week that the next-generation A110 is being put through US crash tests. That’s a pretty unusual step for a car that technically isn’t planned for sale in America. Automakers normally only run those tests if they’re at least considering bringing a vehicle to the US. Otherwise, it’s just an expensive way to smash perfectly good prototypes into walls and poles.

Related: Renault Spent $30 Million To Make This French 911 Legal In America, Then Built Just 12

For Alpine, the potential payoff could be huge. Despite shrinking demand for sports cars, CEO Philippe Krief told Auto News that the global market for vehicles like the A110 sits at roughly 350,000 units per year, and about half of those sales happen in the United States. So skipping America means ignoring the biggest sports car market on Earth.

America Is An ‘Opportunity’

“We’re now focusing on Europe, because the business is built for Europe, but naturally the growth could be in the US,” the former Ferrari man said. “At least, I would not want to avoid that opportunity in the US,” he continued, while conceding that selling and distributing cars in America would need some planning even if the regulatory roadblocks were overcome.

Originally, Alpine had planned to enter the US with a pair of electric crossovers around 2028. But those plans are currently on ice as EV demand cools and tariffs complicate global trade. Instead, the company might be considering leading with the one car enthusiasts actually want, the A110.

All-New A110

 Alpine Crash Tests Sports Car For A Possible US Debut

That would be the next-generation A110 due to hit the road in 2027. The upcoming model rides on a new Alpine Performance Platform known as APP, with the first details and pictures revealed this week. It was originally designed purely for electric power, but having watched the market for electric performance cars sag, Alpine later figured out how to squeeze combustion engines into it as well.

Krief stopped short of confirming a petrol version for sale, but the platform’s flexibility makes one look increasingly likely. Alpine knows that while electric sports cars sound exciting in theory, the real-world market remains pretty small.

911-Style Big Brother

The APP architecture will underpin several cars, and not just a new A110 coupe. There will be one of those, of course, but also a convertible spider version, and a larger 2 plus 2 sports coupe designed to challenge the Porsche 911. That last one could be especially interesting for the US, where the 911 sells by the bucketload, and a higher price would mean higher margins than with the A110.

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Alpine’s Electric Sports Car Is Coming, But So Is The ICE One You Actually Want

  • Alpine developing advanced APP platform for next-gen A110 EV.
  • Platform features 800-volt charging tech and dual rear motors.
  • Alpine boss confirms platform can also support combustion power.

Alpine has hung its hat on electric power with cars like the A290, A390, and the upcoming A110, but the company isn’t completely closing the door on gasoline just yet. The brand has revealed secrets of its new Alpine Performance Platform that will underpin the next A110 and future models, and it’s reportedly designed to handle both EV and combustion power.

The new platform, which will underpin coupe and spider versions of the A110, as well as a 911-rivalling 2+2, sits at the center of Alpine’s role in Renault Group’s wider futuREady strategy. It’s a super-stiff, bonded, and riveted aluminum structure featuring all-aluminum suspension components to keep weight low, and two separate battery packs to ensure an optimal 40:60 front-rear weight distribution.

Related: Alpine Thinks Driving Got Too Serious, So It’s Building EV Convertibles

A dual-motor rear axle setup provides the power, together with a torque-vectoring function that can adjust power side-to-side every 10 milliseconds to sharpen handling. It should perform well at the charging station, too. The platform uses an 800-volt electrical architecture for fast charging capability. A new central computer, called the Alpine Dynamic Model ECU, will act as the brain of the system, coordinating the motors, battery management, steering, brakes, and even active aerodynamics.

CEO Philippe Krief says he’s confident the finished A110 EV will be “true to Alpine’s DNA and outperform the best of today’s combustion sports cars.”

Keep The Customer Satisfied

But he also knows the majority of Alpine buyers – and sports car fans in general – don’t want an electric A110. And it looks like he’s going to give them a lifeline. Although there’s no mention of a petrol-powered A110 in Alpine’s official strategy drop this morning, Autocar reports Krief confirming that the possibility is there.

 Alpine’s Electric Sports Car Is Coming, But So Is The ICE One You Actually Want


“Before you ask, yes the platform is designed to accommodate an internal combustion engine,” the CEO told the British magazine.

Horse Power

No further details were given, but we previously reported how Alpine could use a hybrid powertrain developed by Renault-Geely collab Horse. It’s alleged to pump out 349 hp (354 PS) and 380 lb-ft (515 Nm), which would be plenty in a relatively lightweight car.

Sadly for US fans of the Alpine brand, neither the next ICE-powered A110, its electric sibling, nor any other Alpine model will be heading to North America. Expansion across the Atlantic had been under consideration for a while, but Alpine put those plans on hold last year due to the arrival of Trump’s tariffs and slowing growth in the US EV market.

The Renault Group futuREady plan announced this week also makes clear that Alpine will focus on existing markets for the time being rather than attempting to expand into new ones.

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Alpine

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