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Alpine A290 review
Interior
What is it like on the inside?
Just like the Renault 5 it shares its bones with, the Alpine’s interior feels fresh but not generic, and digitally controlled but not exclusively so. There are plush materials everywhere, especially in the top-spec GTS we drove that gets the seats, dashboard, and door panels upholstered in blue and grey Nappa leather, while the soft but supportive seats – unique to the Alpine – are a triumph.
A 10.25-inch instrument cluster is joined in one single monolithic slab to the 10.1-inch central infotainment display, which works rather well. In short, from the inside, it feels like a more expensive car than it actually is.
Any space for your mates and their bags?
Some… climb in the back and a 5ft8in passenger can happily sit behind a 5ft8in driver, but the battery raises the floor level and means there’s little room to get your toes under the seat in front. The boot is small in depth (downwards), but deep (y’know, forwards), and in such a compact space the nine-speaker, 615W Devialet sounds system punches pretty hard. The waffle-style headliner is a carry-over from the R5, but adds some interesting texture if staring at the ceiling is your thing.
The more you poke around, the more you discover the thought that’s gone into the insides. A Tesla-style route planner that tells you the charger you need to stop at and for how long via the built-in Google Maps, is all you’ll ever need. Or there’s Apple CarPlay and Android Auto if you want to stick with what you know.
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