Could Lada ever make a comeback to the UK? It’s
not impossible – and a new concept car on the Russian
manufacturer’s stand shows that the company’s
next-generation of cars will be a far cry from the old
Communist-era Rivas and Samaras of the past.

The Lada C is an aggressive-looking C-segment three-door
hot hatch, powered by a 2-litre petrol engine, and is
the first fruits of Lada-maker AvtoVAZ’s new alliance
with contract manufacturer MagnaSteyr. The new platform
will become the base for the next generation of Lada production
cars, which will be launched in the near future, according
to Lada spokesman Denis Metalnikov.
MagnaSteyr has designed the platform, but AvtoVAZ’s
own Russian designers have styled the Lada C, which is
part of a family of cars to be built on the platform,
including a sedan, a five-door hatch, a compact MPV and
a crossover. All the vehicles will comply with stringent
European emissions and safety regulations, and will be
built at a new plant being set up on AvtoVAZ’s vast
Togliatti factory, and which will be managed by MagnaSteyr,
Metalnikov said.
Strong sales in Russia have kept Lada alive – the
company still builds around 700,000 cars a year. And it
exports its current models to left-hand drive markets
in Europe: at Geneva it showed new variants of the Kalina
small car, including a 1.6-litre GHTI version and a new
estate body.
AvtoVAZ also has a joint venture with General Motors,
building the Lada-developed Niva SUV and SKD versions
of the new Chevrolet Captiva. And it is in talks with
Renault about setting up another production line to build
the Logan ‘world car’.