Skip advert
Advertisement
Features

Alpine GTA USA – dead on arrival

The tale of how a revised ’80s Alpine nearly became a halo car for Renault in America

In 1979 AMC made a deal with Renault to sell the French company’s cars through its vast US dealer network. From there things got serious and by late 1980 Renault was taking a 46 per cent stake in the struggling American company and drawing up grand plans for a US invasion, led by locally assembled versions of the R9 and R11 and an Americanised version of the R18. But to lure Americans to their local AMC showrooms Renault really needed a sexy, low‑slung flagship. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

Happily, the company’s advanced research division, BEREX, was working on just such a thing: a striking successor to the Alpine A310, to be called the Grand Tourisme Alpine or GTA. Less happily, by the time Renault realised the GTA could be useful across the Atlantic the project was already well advanced and, given its shoestring budget, no effort had been made to engineer it for US regulations. But Renault’s appetite was whetted by projections that said 2500 Americans a year would buy one, thereby doubling GTA production numbers, so once the Euro Alpine had entered production in late ’84, Renault HQ gave BEREX an extra 180 million francs to create a GTA that would meet US rules and requirements.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

 > Saab PhoeniX – dead on arrival

The changes needed were many, starting with a stronger front-end structure, bigger and tougher bumpers, and side-impact beams in the doors. The glassed-in headlights breached strict US standards so they were replaced by pop-up lamps, sitting above an enlarged front intake for better cooling. Also on the outside there were Federally mandated side marker lights and a central stop lamp, while on the inside Americans would get standard air con, leather seats and cruise control.

Advertisement - Article continues below

All told, the US market Alpine was 136mm longer, 200 kilos heavier and ten per cent weaker, its emissions-control kit knocking the 200 horsepower turbocharged V6 of Euro cars down to 180bhp. By late 1986 the Federalised GTA was ready and pre-production cars were loaned to a generally enthusiastic US media, Motor Trend even proclaiming it a ‘European Corvette fighter’.

Unfortunately, in November 1986 Renault boss Georges Besse was assassinated by left-wing terrorists, and his successor, Raymond Lévy, had no patience for the company’s expensive American adventure when La Regie’s ship urgently needed stabilising at home. In March ’87 AMC Jeep was sold to Chrysler and the American-spec GTA was culled just as series production was about to begin. Of the 21 cars built before the blade fell, 12 were sold to the public and the rest used in the development of the Alpine A610, a revised GTA incorporating many of the engineering changes created for the American model. This, however, wasn’t the only way in which a part of the Federal GTA lived on.

Around the time the American Alpine was cancelled, Lotus was signing off Peter Stevens’ design for the M100 Elan, which was intended to use Isuzu Piazza rear lights behind perspex covers. Only after the design had been approved was it found that these didn’t emit enough light to meet homologation rules, triggering an urgent search for replacements that ended when Stevens spotted a GTA in an episode of BBC yacht schlock drama Howards’ Way and reckoned its tail lights were the right size and shape for his Elan.

A quick trip to a local Renault dealer confirmed his suspicion and the French were happy to sell Lotus the parts, including the redundant Federalised version of the GTA rear light (with red turn signals rather than orange) which was used on Elans exported to the USA. As such, while the US-spec GTA died with Renault’s American ambitions, a piece of it lived on with every M100 Elan sold in the United States. 

This story was first featured in evo issue 306.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

BMW M3 (E30, 1986-1990) review – the greatest M car of all?
BMW E30 M3 – front
In-depth reviews

BMW M3 (E30, 1986-1990) review – the greatest M car of all?

The E30 BMW M3 fully deserves its legendary status, born from racing and still delivering a knock-out drive four decades on from its launch
13 Jun 2025
Japan’s supercar: revisiting the Honda NSX – car pictures of the week
Honda NSX front
Features

Japan’s supercar: revisiting the Honda NSX – car pictures of the week

While all the attention is on the ‘80s stars in evo issue 334, we revisited a ‘90s Japanese legend too
7 Jun 2025
Lotus has launched a new flagship Emira, and it starts from almost £100k
Lotus Emira – front
News

Lotus has launched a new flagship Emira, and it starts from almost £100k

Lotus’s range-topping Emira V6 SE has arrived, packing a retuned chassis and 400bhp to take on the Porsche 911 Carrera
5 Jun 2025
Porsche 911 Carrera GTS 2025 review – hybrid done the right way
Porsche 911 GTS – front
Reviews

Porsche 911 Carrera GTS 2025 review – hybrid done the right way

A new hybrid engine and chassis upgrades have injected personality and huge capability into the 992
3 Jun 2025
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

£15k off an Audi RS6 – 621bhp super estate discounted by over 10 per cent
Audi RS6
News

£15k off an Audi RS6 – 621bhp super estate discounted by over 10 per cent

Audi’s V8 titan is near the end of its life and high-spec examples are now available with big discounts
10 Jun 2025
Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport 2025 review – the ultimate all-season performance tyre?
Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport
Reviews

Michelin CrossClimate 3 Sport 2025 review – the ultimate all-season performance tyre?

It’s been almost a decade in the making, but Michelin believes it’s finally cracked the code for an all-weather performance tyre with the CrossClimate…
9 Jun 2025
Caterham 310 Encore is the end of the line for the Ford 1.6
Caterham Seven 310 Encore
News

Caterham 310 Encore is the end of the line for the Ford 1.6

It’s goodbye and goodnight for the Caterham Seven 310, with the 25-strong run of 310 Encores serving as the final farewell
11 Jun 2025