2015-01-30

Bringing the Albany out of obscurity

So you think you know about cars? Answer me this then...what is a Vauxhall Albany?


Never heard of it? I can't say I'm surprised as it seems to have been almost totally forgotten and by publishing this post I have doubled the amount of material about it available on the internet! The only other page I can find is on the excellent Vauxpedia, a first-stop resource for all things Vauxhall.

Vauxhall publicity photo of the elusive Albany. No one ever seems to have photographed one on the road!

So what was the Albany and why has it been consigned to the scrapyard of automotive history?

In short it was Vauxhall's first MPV, but also basically a Bedford Midi van with windows. Although the Midi was already well established in minibus form, these were utilitarian vehicles aimed squarely at the commercial market, and the success of the likes of the Renault Espace prompted Vauxhall to produce a far more upmarket car-like seven-seater.

The Bedford Midi. Fine as a van but did it ever stand a chance in the MPV market?

The Albany was launched at the 1990 British Motor Show and featured an impressive list of standard equipment that was certainly a cut above the basic Midi, including tinted glass, twin sunroofs, reclining seats, separate rear heating and power steering. Sadly, all of these luxuries couldn't disguise the fact it was very obviously based not only on a van, but a van that was starting to show its age against the competition. Only one brochure was ever issued for the Albany, which pictured the vehicle in various aspirational 'lifestyle' settings where it was horribly out of place but seemed to aim it primarily at business customers such as hotels and corporate shuttle services rather than private buyers.

The Albany brochure promoting its lifestyle credentials. The glider would probably be a more pleasant mode of transport.

The upshot of all this was that the Albany flopped. The range never expanded beyond a single model available in just two colours (the Bordeaux Red and Westminster Blue illustrated above) and propelled by a crude and underpowered 2-litre petrol engine. Perhaps more significantly than the vehicle's own failings though, the market for luxury van-derived MPVs we see today exemplified by the Ford Tourneo and Mercedes Viano just didn't exist 25 years ago and cars such as the Espace were aimed very much at the small niche of providing fairly basic transport for large families without portraying a prestige image, so the Albany's 'executive' credentials were somewhat misplaced. Only 300 were officially sold before it was quietly dropped just over a year after launch, and around half of those are said to have actually been registered either by dealers or by Vauxhall themselves in a desperate attempt to improve the dire sales figures. Vauxhall's next attempt at an MPV, the American-built Sintra, met with little more success but it was third time lucky with the innovative Zafira.


I actually have some recollection of seeing an Albany in real life. A large family in the village where I went to primary school had a red one - this was the early nineties so they probably bought it new. Even in my very young mind I knew it was basically a van and vastly inferior to the Mitsubishi Space Wagon my parents had at the time. Today there are apparently only two left on the road and the model has disappeared into almost total obscurity - has anyone actually seen one?

So there you have it, my own little tribute to a tiny, insignificant and forgotten part of automotive history.

8 comments:

  1. We had one! It was a dark blue one, reg H946WUG. DVLA tells me that it was registered in June 1991 (which would be when we had it) and that the tax last ran out in April 2002, so we can safely assume it was scrapped quite some time ago.

    An old friend of my Dad's owned a Vauxhall dealership at the time, which is how we were introduced to it.

    It actually did fill a niche for us - going on holiday, there would be four kids plus my long-suffering Grandmother crammed in the back. Things like the Renault Espace *could* get seven people in - just about - but left no available luggage space.

    In this, we'd turn the middle two seats around to face the back. There was then a load of room between the front seats and middle seats to stuff a few suitcases, as well as the huge boot. It would carry the seven of us plus luggage happily down to France in reasonable comfort - which is handy because it was never going to win speed awards.

    It was replaced with a Previa, which is objectively a far better vehicle but didn't have the same sheer amount of room.

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  2. My parents also had one. My dad's company had a policy that he could choose his company car as long as it was British. As we had 4 kids and a grandmother living we us he first had a white midi and then after 3 years he had a blue albany. As kids we loved these cars. The Albany had fantastic swivel seats which always felt so 'posh' for us kids. The benefit of the midi and albany was that it prevised so much room for people and stuff. In fact we spent a weeks holiday in Scotland sleeping in our midi including 6 people and a dog. My brother and sisters were quite young. The albany wasn't so good in many ways as the seats didn't all go down. I don't know how it drive, I don't recall my dad ever complaiming about it. I think he quite enjoyed it.

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  3. Yes we had the blue one and it was excellent for the four kids, loads of luggage. Darts team and ski trips.Loving called Bessie bus it served us well.At time of purchase a much better deal than the espace.Yes it lacked style but made up for that in so many ways...

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  4. We're busy restoring/converting one of the van versions - a 1994/5 model. I don't suppose you happen to know what the paint colour name for that one is/was? Hard to match, even without that faded glamour! Thanks.

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    1. How is the restoration going? I've got a midi campervan so I am interested in anything midi related!....for some reason.lol

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  5. They were sold as the Holden Shuttle LS & LT in Australia.

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  6. My family from a North East Scotland village (Tough) had a red one (H96 USA) for years for family (6 of us) caravan holidays etc. and it was brilliant for that. Certainly wasn't luxurious, but it was very practical and great for towing. I would buy one today if I could find one.

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  7. Took one of these in part exchange around 1999-2000. My salesman rang me to say a guy wanted a px against i think an M reg Fiat Tipo. I said to my salesman wtf is a Vauxhall Albany, anyway did the deal and what a fantastic deal it turned out to be. I wasn’t unimpressed, nicely kitted out inside with Astra GTE rainbow upholstery. The old days were the best.

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