Skoda Octavia Estate’s epic milestone
September 22, 2022
One of Skoda’s most enduring and popular models, the Octavia estate, celebrates a significant milestone in 2022.
The variant, which has been a perennial best-seller for the brand, made its first appearance 25 years ago this month – as a concept car at the 1997 Frankfurt Motor Show.
Although officially called a concept, the show car was effectively the finished production model. The striking purple Octavia illustrated Skoda’s commitment to expanding its range and broadening its customer base into new markets.
Designed by a team led by Dirk van Braeckel (which had created the Octavia hatchback a year earlier), the concept previewed the unveiling of a barely altered production version six months later at the 1998 Geneva Motor Show.
The first modern-era Octavia estate had the same 2,512mm wheelbase as the hatchback but was 6mm longer and 26mm taller. Despite the increases, the estate version weighed just 15kg more than the hatch – a testament to Skoda’s design and engineering skills.
At the back, the first new-generation Octavia estate offered a boot capacity of 548 litres with the rear seats up and a cavernous 1,512 litres with the seats folded. These figures made the new Octavia the largest and most practical Skoda passenger car ever produced.
The Octavia estate marked a return to the large estate sector for Skoda after a 26 year absence. Its distant predecessor, the 1961 Octavia was a ground-breaking design that helped set the template for the modern-era estate car.
First presented at the International Engineering Fair in Brno, Czech Republic on 11 September 1960, Skoda produced the estate until 1971 when it was succeeded by the 1000MB. Due to the MB’s rear-engine layout, an estate version was never built.
The Octavia was designed and engineered under Volkswagen Group ownership. While the world’s media was quick to praise the new Octavia for its quality, sophistication and practicality, the remarkable transformation of Skoda’s production facilities was equally newsworthy.
Following massive investment from the Volkswagen Group, the Skoda plant at Mladá Boleslav was the most advanced car factory in Europe at the time. Featuring one of the largest presses in the world, the fully modernised plant was capable of stamping out a complete side section of the Octavia estate in one piece.
Such was the demand in the early stages of production, British customers had to wait until 1998 for right-hand drive models to finally arrive in showrooms.
The initial range consisted of 1.6-litre petrol versions in a simple two-model trim structure. A 1.8-litre turbo engine was added to the range in 1999, along with diesels. Then the line-up was revised in 2000 with new trim names; Classic, Ambiente, Elegance and Laurin & Klement, and a new engine range.
In 2001, the first Octavia vRS model arrived in UK showrooms. Powered by a 1.8-litre turbocharged engine with 180PS on tap, Skoda’s first performance production model since the late 1970s proved a huge hit with buyers – especially in estate form – and provided the foundations for the current multi-model vRS range.
To date more than 166,000 Octavia estate models have been sold in the UK. Estate variants have accounted for 45 per cent of Octavia sales in the UK since 1998. The current, fourth-generation model has won eight titles since its introduction in 2020.