Recent Updates

 

11/01/2025 12:00 PM

21st century icons: the best car of every year revealed

 

11/01/2025 12:00 PM

Ian Callum: axed Jaguar XJ EV could have used six-cylinder engine

 

11/01/2025 12:00 PM

We tried the UK’s 10 most popular EV fast chargers - which is best?

 

10/31/2025 12:00 PM

The best used electric car bargains to snap up now

 

10/30/2025 12:00 PM

Toyota to use solid-state battery in "high-power" EV in 2027

 

10/30/2025 12:00 PM

Finish it yourself: Toyota leaves new mini-4x4 purposely incomplete

 

10/30/2025 12:00 PM

How VW engineers can beat China – with their bums

 

10/30/2025 12:00 PM

Repmobile royalty: the cars that defined '70s, '80s and '90s office life

 

10/30/2025 12:00 PM

Used Fiat 500 2008-2025 review

 

10/30/2025 12:00 PM

New Corolla will get FCEV as Toyota 'fully committed' to hydrogen

<<    1   2   3   4   5   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 7144   Next >
Finish it yourself: Toyota leaves new mini-4x4 purposely incomplete
Thursday, Oct 30, 2025 12:00 PM
IMG 4166 1 Rugged, bare-bones IMV Origin concept is a flatpack truck that can be whatever its owner needs

Toyota has revealed a bare-bones, go-anywhere 4x4 truck that it says it will never finish - on purpose.

The IMV Origin is a compact, flatbed, off-road-ready utility vehicle that Toyota has designed specifically for rural villages in remote areas of Africa, where the terrain is challenging, access to spare parts extremely difficult, and public transport non-existent.

Equipped with just one seat in its offset cab, no doors or windows, and a completely bare frame, the IMV Origin will be built to a state of 70% completion by Toyota in Japan, and then shipped as a kit – like a flatpack piece of furniture – for the owner to finish building, or, Toyota says, "co-create".

It is "the ideal tool to empower its users" said Lance Scott from Toyota's European design studio in France, because it can be "assembled on site with simple tools, and adapted to your needs".

The IMV Origin can be a pick-up, a box truck, a flat-bed or even a mini safari-style bus with more seats - "it's easy to build, easy to modify and full of opportunities for the local population to profit from being a part of the creation process".

Toyota envisions that leaving final assembly to the end user will spark the creation of mini production facilities in these remote locations, where importers can modify the IMV Origin to suit local needs and serve as a supplier to local industries.

It's a similar concept to the IMV 0 concept Toyota revealed in 2022, which evolved into the Hilux Champ - a larger truck chassis that is similarly adaptable and designed with affordability in mind.

Toyota's president and CEO Koji Sato, revealing the concept at the Tokyo motor show, said it was "frustrating" for the company to leave a car deliberately incomplete, but added: "Not finishing it is what makes it a 'for you' car, because people have different needs in their daily life and work.

It has not given any technical details of the concept, but it looks to have a similar compact footprint and wheelbase to a supermini, and will no doubt have a combustion-based powertrain, given the lack of EV charging infrastructure in the regions for which it's been designed.

< Prev    of 7144   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields