Buick Cascada will start at $33,990
Buick prices the convertible Cascada at $33,990 for the US market, including destination charges.
Buick prices the convertible Cascada at $33,990 for the US market, including destination charges.
This car was spotted in a rendering that Buick provided of its stand at the Detroit Auto Show. Two doors, four seats, no top, deep and arcing shoulder line - any idea what that might be?
Ever since Opel brought out the Cascada convertible last year, rumors have been flying that Buick would offer it Stateside – much like it does with the Insignia-based Regal and the Astra-based Noah Joseph
The affordable four-seat convertible has become a largely forgotten genre in the States, especially with the death of the Chrysler 200 Convertible. Of course, there are still premium options from Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz – not to mention more overtly performance-oriented droptop pon
It's difficult to overstate how significant the post-bankruptcy years have been for General Motors' Brandon Turkus
Holden, General Motor's Australian arm, is just beginning a major transition. The automaker announced late last year that it would end local production in 2017. But recently, Gerry Dorizas, its new managing director, boldly declared that the marque is gunning to Chris Bruce
Opel, General Motors' troubled German brand continues its quest to reinvent itself and find solid profitability. In the course of that metamorphosis, the company has a bit of good news/bad news today. The good news is, it will once again begin screwing together Buick models for the American market. The bad news, though, is that it's being shut down in yet another country, Brandon Turkus
General Motors has toyed with a variety of ways to sell Opel products outside of continental Europe, sending them to the UK as Vauxhall products, to Australia with Holden badges, and even back to North America as Saturn models. But these days
For a company with a long tradition of grand touring convertibles, it's almost unseemly that General Motors doesn't offer a properly relaxed four-seat convertible in North America. There's the Chevrolet Camaro, of course, but it's not big on rear-seat space and it doesn't offer that sort of serene demeanor that many open-air buyers crave. We're thinking of something more refined an
According to Automotive News, General Motors CEO Dan Akerson has his eye on a couple of overseas models for B