Buick Cascada axed, sales will continue through 2019
With the Opel/Vauxhall Cascada due to end production this year, it was only a matter of time before it became official the Buick version would also be axed.
With the Opel/Vauxhall Cascada due to end production this year, it was only a matter of time before it became official the Buick version would also be axed.
The Opel Adam (Vauxhall Adam), Opel Karl (Vauxhall Viva), and Opel Cascada (Vauxhall Cascada) are going out of production because they’re GM cars.
The Vauxhall Cascada was axed from the UK and Ireland range months ago, but no-one noticed, and now the last cars have been sold spelling the end.
The Opel Cascada Supreme special edition has black grille and mirrors, dark two tone 20-inch alloys, and red stitching in the cockpit.
The Opel Cascada (also sold as a Buick, Vauxhall and Holden) is a pretty little four-seat soft-top convertible, but what does its name mean?
Built on the Delta II platform, the Opel Cascada is essentially a soft-top convertible version of the Opel Astra J. Sold also as a Holden or Buick.
Basically a rebadged and federalised Opel, the new Buick Cascada gives the tri-shield brand its first convertible in years.
A day ahead of the opening of the 2015 Detroit Motor Show, Buick has confirmed that it will bring the Opel Cascada to the US badged as the Buick Cascada.
GM has applied to US Patent Office extend its hold on the Velite name, indicating that Buick’s version of the Opel Cascada may be dubbed the Buick Velite.
GM has shown a Buick-badged version of the Opel Cascada convertible to a meeting of Buick dealers indicating, perhaps, that US sales are on the cards.