Skip to main content

Toyota’s low-slung concept car brings Le Mans technology to the street

Toyota
In the middle of January, all eyes are on the annual Detroit Auto Show. In Japan, the big car-related event is called Tokyo Auto Salon. Toyota will be present at both events. We’ll see the next-generation Avalon in Detroit, and a brand-new concept named GR Super Sport in Tokyo.

The GR Super Sport draws inspiration from the TS050, the ultra-advanced prototype Toyota races in the World Endurance Championship (WEC). The dark teaser image released by the Japanese firm shows a low-slung coupe with pronounced front fenders, a wrap-around windshield that rests on rakish A-pillars, and a sloping roof line with a long fin. The back end wears a massive spoiler that stretches the entire width of the car, though it looks smaller than the one that provides the TS050 with downforce as it blasts down the Mulsanne Straight during the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Recommended Videos

Toyota explains it built the GR Super Sport concept to demonstrate how technology born on the track seeps down into its production models. The initials GR stand for Gazoo Racing, the brand-new performance sub-brand the company launched a couple of months ago. Rumors claim the upcoming Supra — which might not resurrect the Supra name after all — will join the Gazoo Racing sub-brand when it finally makes its debut.

Mercedes-AMG showed one way to transfer technology from the track to the street with the Project One. Toyota could do the same with its next concept. Official technical details aren’t available yet, but Motor Authority speculates the GR Super Sport could use a toned-down version of the TS050’s gasoline-electric powertrain. It uses a twin-turbocharged 2.4-liter V6 engine and several electric motors to send up to 1,000 horsepower to all four wheels. A lithium-ion battery pack stores electricity.

Toyota will publish additional details about the GR Super Sport concept in the coming weeks. We’ll learn what the future holds for the model; it might be a simple design study but we’re hoping it will spawn a production model sooner or later. When the car makes its debut, we’ll also get more insight about the future of the company’s Le Mans effort and Toyota’s performance-oriented subdivision.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
2022 Toyota Tundra hybrid first drive review: New dog, old tricks
2022 toyota tundra i force max hybrid review front three quarter

Toyota has done more than any other automaker to popularize hybrid cars. Japan’s largest automaker may not have been the first to bring a hybrid to the United States (that was Honda), but the Toyota Prius made the idea stick -- and it didn't end there. Over the last decade, Toyota built on the popularity of the Prius, adding hybrid powertrains to nearly every type of vehicle.

One of the most glaring gaps in Toyota’s hybrid lineup has been pickup trucks, in part because Toyota hasn’t bothered to give its Tundra pickup a full redesign since the 2007 model year. In the meantime, Ford beat Toyota off the line with its 2021 F-150 PowerBoost hybrid. For the 2022 model year, Toyota aims to make up lost ground with the Tundra i-Force Max hybrid.

Read more
2023 Toyota Sequoia supersizes hybrid tech
The 2023 Toyota Sequoia towing an Airstream trailer.

If you want to appreciate how far automotive technology has come in the past decade and a half, take a look at the Toyota Sequoia.

Toyota's full-size SUV was last redesigned for the 2007 model year, and today it feels as ancient as the giant trees it's named for. The Sequoia predates the proliferation of infotainment and driver-assist tech, and when it was designed, the only way to provide sufficient grunt was to stick a gas-guzzling V8 under the hood. Times have changed, and now, finally, so has the Sequoia.

Read more
Chrysler Airflow concept is a sleek, screen-filled EV
Exterior view of the Chrysler Airflow concept.

At CES 2022, Stellantis unveiled the Chrysler Airflow concept, an electric SUV previewing the brand’s first production electric model, due in 2025. Stellantis also confirmed that the Chrysler brand will go all-electric by 2028.

Taking its name from the revolutionary 1934 Chrysler Airflow, which introduced aerodynamic design to the auto industry, the Airflow concept combines the tall ride height of an SUV with a sleek profile and long wheelbase. Balancing aerodynamics with the SUV packaging buyers prefer, it’s a similar styling approach to current production EVs like the Ford Mustang Mach-E, Volkswagen ID.4, and Tesla Model Y.

Read more