Skip to main content

BMW’s entry-level 2 Series Gran Coupe packs big tech in a small package

BMW expanded its range of models toward the bottom with the 2020 2 Series Gran Coupe. Scheduled to make its public debut during the 2019 Los Angeles Auto Show, the model is a sedan-shaped companion to the third-generation 1 Series hatchback sold in global markets, including Europe.

Recommended Videos

We’ll let you decide whether a four-door model should wear the coupe nameplate. Semantics aside, what’s certain is the 2 Series Gran Coupe is based on a front-wheel-drive platform, which is highly unusual for a BMW-badged model, but it will exclusively be available with all-wheel drive when it arrives in the United States. The range will include two models named 228i and M235i, respectively, and Digital Trends has already driven them both. The 228i is the entry point into the lineup; it offers 228 horsepower and 258 pound-feet of torque from a turbocharged, 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine. The more expensive M235i uses a tuned version of the turbo four whose output swells to 301 hp and 332 lb-ft. of torque.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

An eight-speed automatic transmission comes standard regardless of which badge lives on the trunk lid. The 2s are quick, fun, and sharp, though they’re not as lively to drive as the rear-wheel-drive 2 Series coupe.

The technology jam-packed into the 2 Series Gran Coupe seeped down from the bigger 3 Series, Digital Trends learned from BMW engineer Johannes Kühberger. Cherry-picking features like the infotainment system, the available 10.25-inch digital instrument cluster, and the electronic driving aids from the 3 ensure the Gran Coupe is suitably tech-savvy in spite of its entry-level positioning. The underlying message is that buying a smaller, cheaper car shouldn’t be a compromise.

Speaking of infotainment, the system looks almost exactly like the 3’s, and it features a neat split-screen functionality that shows up to three tiles side by side. The driver doesn’t have to get rid of navigation directions to change the radio station, for example. The screen itself displays sharp graphics, and it’s fully touch-capable. It’s also possible to jump between the various menus using the iDrive controller on the center console. BMW offers a 9.2-inch head-up display at an extra cost.

After greeting the show-going public in Los Angeles, the BMW 2 Series Gran Coupe will arrive in showrooms nationwide in early 2020. Pricing information hasn’t been released yet, but expect it to start in the vicinity of $32,000. When it lands, it will face competition from the Audi A3, and Mercedes-Benz’s A-Class and CLA models.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
Audi’s electric 2022 Q4 E-Tron packs big tech, lots of space in compact package
audi previews 2022 q4 e tron compact electric crossover

First presented in 2019, the Audi Q4 E-Tron concept has nearly completed its transition to becoming a production model. It will join the full-size E-Tron and the recently introduced E-Tron GT sport sedan when it makes its full debut later in 2021.

Don't let the funky orange, black, and white livery trick your mind; It's camouflage applied specifically to keep the full exterior design hidden. We can nonetheless discern key elements like the lights, which stylists have tweaked over the past two or so years, and the proportions, which are unusual. First of all, the front end is a lot shorter than we're used to seeing. Audi was able to achieve this because an electric motor requires less space than a four-cylinder or a V6 engine.

Read more
Watch BMW test an electric jet pack that lets you fly at 186 mph
BMW Electrified Wingsuit

BMW's electric technology will power thousands of sedans and SUVs during the 2020s, but the company's ambitions are much higher -- literally. It's forward-thinking BMW i division teamed up with Austrian stuntman Peter Salzmann to develop a battery-powered wingsuit capable of propelling the person wearing it through the air at up to 186 mph.

Creating the device that allowed the 33-year-old Salzmann to fly above the Austrian Alps took about three years. While the wingsuit isn't a new invention, the drive unit that powers it was developed from scratch. It needed to be relatively compact, reasonably light, power dense, and, of course, reliable -- no one wants to run out of juice at 9,000 feet. BMW leveraged its expertise in electric powertrains (it released the i3 in 2013, before EVs were cool) to make it work.

Read more
Take a peek under the skin of BMW’s upcoming hydrogen-electric SUV
BMW i Hydrogen Next

Previous

Next

Read more