A quadricycle is not a car. It's still got four wheels, in some cases a roof, and can be propelled down the road under its own steam. But it is not a car. The Renault Twizy is a quadricycle, a really ...
The fact that Renault’s Twizy lacks windows may have turned some potential buyers away from the car, as it would only really be practical and enjoyable on a warm and not-at-all wet day. However, an ...
The Renault Twizy will be offered with windows from the end of November. The windows can also be bought as an after-sale option, and can be fitted by owners to their existing Twizy if they wish.
Renault's electric-powered Twizy city car has gained an set of windows ahead of the winter, an unusual option for what's already an oddball vehicle. The twin-seater EV – which sits driver and ...
Renault Twizy drivers won't all have to suffer in the cold or be drenched by rain - the French automaker now has an aftermarket kit that includes, er, zip-in windows. Twizy owners will now be able to ...
To celebrate the addition of windows to its electric Twizy model Renault has worked with Publicis to create a new press advert. Launched last April, the 100 per cent electric urban compact two-seater ...
Introduced in 2012, the Renault Twizy is one of the oldest EVs still on sale today. The all-electric microcar, classified as a quadricycle in Europe, has survived to this day largely unchanged.
It’s not very often that an outlandish concept car makes the transition from prototype to fully-fledged product. Take the Citroën Lacoste concept, for example. Things are a little different for the ...
For a car without side windows, the Renault Twizy sure is selling pretty well. At least, it is in Germany, where 1,000 units have sold since the car went on sale in the middle of April even though ...
Here at Auto Express, we’re big fans of the Renault Twizy’s unique approach to personal transport, but lately we’ve become guilty of neglect. As the long winter nights and plummeting temperatures have ...
“Dave, look at this”, yelled a scaffolder to his colleague as I passed below on Monday. “Wassat?”, his colleague replied. “Dunno; Renault,” said the first man, as they squinted from their lofty perch.