Currently reading: New Alpine A310 inbound as electric, four-seat A110

Sleek sports car will rival Porsche 911 as "an icon of future sports cars" as part of seven-strong EV line-up

Alpine is bringing back the A310 as a rakish, four-seat electric sports car, and bosses have confirmed the model will remain true to the principles of lightness and agility that have come to define the French firm. 

The revived A310 is one of seven new electric cars set to be launched by 2030 as part of a wholesale reinvention programme for the Renault Group’s sporting brand. 

It will be based on the same Alpine Performance Platform (APP) as the forthcoming electric A110 coupé, due in 2027, and is expected to serve in effect as a more practical alternative to the flagship two-seater, in a relationship mirroring that of the Porsche 718 Cayman and 911

The performance-oriented APP architecture has been conceived to be as configurable as possible and will underpin a compact four-seater that Alpine bosses say will tout engaging driving dynamics to make it “an icon of future sports cars”. 

Alpine marketing director Bruce Pillard said: “If all our future models are going to be electric, they’re going to be true Alpines. They will have the DNA of agility and lightness. Even if it’s an electric car with a battery inside, you’re going to feel the lightness. That’s very important.” 

Alpine A310 front three quarter

Design director Antony Villain added: “We want to do a 2+2 sports car, and of course some time in the past we had the A310, so we will bring together these two ideas as a first intention. Our work now is to frame the [APP] platform that we’re working on, and the final design will be finished in a year and a half.” 

The decision to make the A310 a four-seater comes in line with Alpine’s transformative initiative to move away from being a niche manufacturer to becoming a key volume player on the world stage. 

A diversified seven-strong line-up will comprise the Renault 5-based A290 hot hatchback, A110 (in both coupé and roadster forms), A310, GT X-Over crossover and even D- and E-segment luxury range-toppers all due within the next seven years. 

Back to top

Alpine A110 front three quarter

Pillard said the A310 is emblematic of Alpine’s bid for mass appeal: “The A110 is limited in volume because it’s a two-seater, and we know that adding two more seats in a car will make a huge difference.” 

That the cars are electric is “not the problem”, Pillard added, but the focus is on giving them each a distinctive character – and therefore appeal – for customers. 

Villain said the “vast expertise” that Alpine has at its disposal, including its Formula 1 race team and recently appointed CEO Philippe Krief, formerly of Ferrari and Alfa Romeo, will be instrumental in achieving this. 

Villain added that Alpine is working on taking the next A110 “to the next level” for the electric era, saying that he wants the trademark two-seater to be a “reference point for the next 50 years”. 

Alpine Alpenglow front three quarter

Back to top

As well as readying a raft of mass-market battery-electric sports cars, Alpine is also working to develop a running prototype of its outlandish Alpenglow hypercar concept. 

Due to be revealed “soon”, it’s set to serve as a showcase for the feasibility of hydrogen-combustion technology in the performance car sector.

Jonathan Bryce

Jonathan Bryce
Title: Editorial Assistant

Jonathan is an editorial assistant working with Autocar. He has held this position since March 2024, having previously studied at the University of Glasgow before moving to London to become an editorial apprentice and pursue a career in motoring journalism. 

His role at work involves running Autocar's sister title Move Electric, which is most notably concerned with electric cars. His other roles include writing new and updating existing new car reviews, and appearing on Autocar's social media channels including Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube.

Join the debate

Comments
3
Add a comment…
hywelt 12 September 2023

Looks like the A110 is the last Alpine I can own. Very sad. I'm one of the 44%:

"More than two fifths (44%) of UK homes are unsuitable for charging an electric vehicle (EV) due to the lack of off-road parking, research from Lloyds Bank suggests."

avantus 12 September 2023

Can almost guarantee this will be a waste of time, resources and money. 

sabre 11 September 2023

A car designed by Anthony should look more Villain