I’ve always said that our fast, refined and practical Golf GTI is the ultimate family car, but even I had to admit that it was going to struggle to accommodate seven people and all their luggage for a week’s holiday on the island of Jersey.
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Brilliant though the Golf is, there was no way I could squeeze in me, my wife, our two children, my sister-in-law and two nephews without leaving a pair of disappointed holiday makers on the dockside. Happily, I didn’t have to look far for a temporary replacement, because VW has a number of versatile seven-seaters on its books. And the biggest is the cavernous Caravelle.
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Based on the brand’s legendary Transporter van, this huge MPV is available in short or long-wheelbase guises, and with anything between six and nine seats. Our car was a mid-range Executive model with a seven-seat layout that comprised individual sliding and swivelling ‘captain’s chairs’ for the first two rows, plus a large, sliding three- seater bench at the back.
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More importantly, unlike smaller seven-seaters, the Caravelle’s layout doesn’t come at the expense of boot space. Open the huge tailgate and there’s a healthy 775-litre load bay – more than enough for our three suitcases, a pushchair and numerous sets of buckets and spades.
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The family friendly features don’t end there, though. For starters, Business models get powered and sliding side doors that are a real boon when you’ve got your hands full with a temperamental toddler. All rear seats have Isofix mounting points, too, while the third row can comfortably accommodate three child seats with room to spare.
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Occupants in the rear get bags of space, plus the huge side windows give a panoramic view. And while you’ll have to pay extra for opening glass in the rear doors, the combination of three-zone climate control, tinted rear windows and neat roller blinds helps keep the cabin cool.
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Yet for me, it was the Caravelle driving experience that really impressed. Despite its van underpinnings and sit-up-and-beg driving position, the VW feels very car-like and composed on the road. The punchy 2.0-litre TDI plus slick seven-speed DSG twin-clutch auto box results in surprisingly swift acceleration, while refinement on the run down to the ferry terminal in Poole, Dorset, was first class.
And thanks to its high-set driving position, excellent visibility and boxy dimensions, the Caravelle never felt ponderous on Jersey’s tight and twisty roads. It even returned a decent 35.4mpg, despite spending most of the holiday fully loaded.
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Of course, this versatility isn’t cheap, with our Business model weighing in at over £40,000. But you can spend that on a well specified Sharan – or a Golf GTI for that matter. More importantly, everybody who rode in the Caravelle loved its space and commanding views.
So will I be swapping it for our GTI now that I’m back on the mainland? It’s good, but not that good...
Now read more about the new VW Transporter T6 van...
*Insurance quote from AA (0800 107 0680) for a 42-year-old in Banbury, Oxon, with three points.
- Model: VW Caravelle Executive 2.0 TDI DSG
- Price new: £40,931
- Engine: 2.0-litre 4cyl diesel, 148bhp
- CO2/tax: 203g/km/£290
- Options: Metallic paint (£606), sat-nav and DAB radio (£2,160), reversing camera (£1,008), Visibility Pack (£126)
- Insurance*: Group: 25, Quote: £456
- Mileage/mpg: 1,563/35.4mpg