2017 Land Rover Range Rover Evoque Convertible: First Impressions


What a crazy idea: Let’s chop the top off of a perfectly good SUV and call it the world’s first luxury compact SUV convertible, and, oh yeah, it carries all the off-road goods of the Land Rover Range Rover Evoque, so it’s also able to wade through 20 inches of water. How strange. And I like it. The Evoque Convertible, which debuted at the 2015 Los Angeles Auto Show, is weird, funky and a droptop that has the right stuff be driven year-round — even in wintry conditions.
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Most all-wheel-drive convertibles are sporty cars like the Audi A5, BMW 4 Series, Jaguar F-Type or Porsche 911 that aren’t going to plow through snow or mud as easily as an SUV with its additional ground clearance — and definitely not as well as what a Land Rover convertible can negotiate.

The Evoque in regular form is also a luxury SUV with surprisingly sporty driving characteristics and a luxurious interior, so it has the potential to be good to drive unlike the Nissan Murano CrossCabriolet convertible SUV that occupied a similar space. Like the CrossCabriolet, sitting in the Evoque Convertible with the top down feels like you’re sitting in a bathtub with a high beltline. Top-down is also when the Evoque looks its best. The power-operated soft-top, with its layers of sound insulation, does a poor job of imitating the Evoque’s roofline when it’s up.

Retracting the roof reveals a fantastic configuration where the top folds into its own compartment leaving the cargo area untouched. And what a strange cargo area it is. The liftgate flips up to reveal a deep compartment that’s only usable by shoving items in from the back; it’s not open from the top like a traditional trunk, and it has a smaller, lower-to-the-ground opening than a regular SUV’s liftgate access.

The Evoque Convertible may be quirky and a perfect fit for a theoretical eccentric mountain-climbing sun lover, but I also see this being a hot ticket in cities like Chicago and New York City that get blasted with bad winters. The Evoque Convertible could negate the need to have a convertible weekend car and a daily driver.

Managing Editor Joe Bruzek’s 22 years of automotive experience doesn’t count the lifelong obsession that started as a kid admiring his dad’s 1964 Chevrolet Corvette — and continues to this day. Joe’s been an automotive journalist with Cars.com for 16 years, writing shopper-focused car reviews, news and research content. As Managing Editor, one of his favorite areas of focus is helping shoppers understand electric cars and how to determine whether going electric is right for them. In his free time, Joe maintains a love-hate relationship with his 1998 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am that he wishes would fix itself. LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joe-bruzek-2699b41b/
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