Mysterious Honda Crossover Appears in Design Patent

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

A U.S. design patent granted to Honda on Tuesday reveals that three utility vehicles might not be enough for the Japanese automaker’s American lineup. As car companies both domestic and foreign scramble to fill in gaps in their showrooms, it seems Honda hasn’t yet reached the crossover saturation point.

The patent, which carries a filing date of August 2nd, 2016, shows a two-row crossover with a more steeply raked rear window than either the compact CR-V or midsize Pilot. There’s no headroom for a third row back there. A spoiler adorns the top of the liftgate.

SEE ALSO: 2017 Chevrolet Trax vs. 2017 Honda HR-V Comparison Test

Basically, if the defunct Honda Crosstour and Ford Edge had a baby, it might look a lot like this. The appearance of high-end flourishes, such as a chrome fender vents and integrated twin tailpipes with some surrounding brightwork, lend credence to Automotive News‘ prediction of a potential near-premium two-row arriving next year as a 2019 model.

Dealers apparently pressed Honda for a larger model positioned above the CR-V, designed to do battle with swankier rivals. The model would shun the CR-V’s platform in favor of that of the three-row Pilot.

Not only would the larger platform give backseat passengers room to stretch out, it would also add more acreage aft of the rear seats, allowing for rakish rear glass in the now-commonplace four-door SUV coupe tradition. The model would surely borrow the Pilot’s powertrain, and would be built in Alabama alongside its three-row sibling.

Should it make it to production (what automaker says no to a new crossover?), Honda had better not use the “c” (coupe) word.

A version of this story originally appeared on The Truth About Cars.

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

More by Steph Willems

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 7 comments
  • Lionel Arnold Lionel Arnold on Nov 28, 2017

    The thing does look Crosstoury, which would validate the sentiment of many of the brands followers that it was not their smartest move to discontinue it.

  • Paul Paul on Nov 29, 2017

    Whoopie.

Next