The LEVC L380 Is An Electric Minivan That Doesn’t Seem To Know Its Own Brand

Levc L380 Topshot
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Every so often, a new luxury minivan comes along, and the latest is the LEVC L380, already rolling off the line in China. You know, LEVC, the London Electric Vehicle Company. Alright, that name might not mean anything to you, but I guarantee you’re familiar with LEVC’s biggest product, which is both a blessing and a problem.

See, LEVC was formerly known as the London Taxi Company, and I have a feeling there’s a good chance you can close your eyes and picture a black cab. Now open your eyes and look at the L380. Quite the difference, right? Granted, one of these vehicles is primarily for fleet use, while the other is supposedly for everyone, but it’s hard to believe the two are related in any way.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, London Electric Vehicle Company is owned by Geely, and I have a similar problem with the L380 that I do with the Volvo EM90 minivan. However, while the EM90 is a lazy rebadge, the handsome L380 doesn’t try to adopt any familiar identity at all.

In the media release for this new van, LEVC claims it’s “the first of a new range of innovative, spacious, fully electric models, which will see the brand accelerate its transition from a high-end taxi manufacturer to a leading provider of e-mobility solutions.” First of all, no. This is all meaningless word salad, much of which is frequently used by brands that have no idea what they’re doing and just want to be trendy.

Levc Tx

Second of all, the L380 does nothing to leverage the greatest asset of LEVC — heritage. Outside of this generic minivan, the brand currently makes a retro-inspired London cab and a slightly kitchy commercial vehicle, both of which are rolling sculptures to people who go misty-eyed whenever someone says “Wolseley.” Sure, they may be as British as Indian takeaway underneath, but that doesn’t seem to affect the sentiments of tourists afflicted by an outmoded form of Anglophilia. The nation of royals turned into the nation of Heat magazine long ago, and the rest of the world somehow hasn’t quite caught on yet.

If you’ve assumed decades of public image and nostalgic goodwill, don’t throw it away, milk it for all it’s worth. Look at what Dodge did with the Challenger, or what Porsche is doing full-stop. Nobody cares that a Macan and an Audi Q5 are rather similar, they have vastly different public images that hook people in different ways.

Levc L380

The LEVC L380 has no public image. It’s a great-looking van, but is there anything at all that immediately and recognizably links this people carrier with the black cab? Anything? Bueller? It may sound like a stretch to say this thing would be better if it was roughly 52 percent uglier and had a thatched glovebox, but well, people would know what it is.

The L380 would make a great Geely, but it almost doesn’t seem that Geely recognizes LEVC is best positioned as a sort-of British Mitsuoka. Imagine a range of vehicles that try painfully hard to be quaint despite quite obviously having switchgear from Volvo and platforms shared with humdrum machinery. If people want to live in the past, let them, because good taste doesn’t always build a good brand.

(Photo credits: LEVC)

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33 thoughts on “The LEVC L380 Is An Electric Minivan That Doesn’t Seem To Know Its Own Brand

  1. Eh, regardless of the brand identity, I think it looks nice, and I’ll always root for minivans.
    But, of course…I’m in the U.S. and couldn’t afford EVs anyway.

  2. WTF? Ok let’s start with a blob that kinda sorta looks like a Dustbuster van, or that Plymouth detachable car concept, both from the 90s.

    Now let’s play “pin the tail on the donkey” with the grille. Great, it’s way the fuck up here. So what should we do for an actual nose?

    After a drunk brainstorming session, someone says “let’s make it look like it’s swallowing a car whole, like a snake eating a mouse!”. So someone carves an opening and does just that. Maybe backs a car in through the gate. License plate works. Slap covers over the Reese hitch and exhaust tips. For all we know the turn signals are the same, and the grille may actually be a headlight bar.

  3. I don’t know the British Taxi market is pretty small. Not sure how you expand it when Noone is buying cars just for taxis. I think to succeed you need to bust out of the box into something different to rebrand the image while maybe continuing with the taxi as a Marque model like a Chevy Corvette, or Ford Mustang, or Dodge Chalenger.

  4. The place they need to start is paint the thing black.It would at leasst look a lot better.
    Agree w/ Thomas. It’s a perfectly cromulent van, but should have a totally different badge.

  5. > a leading provider of e-mobility solutions

    Bwahahahhaa

    I consult with smaller businesses and their press releases invariably start with “Acme, Inc, a leader in ”

    A leader. Wtf does that even mean, and why would it matter if it were true?

  6. Seems like parent company Geely is just pumping out new cars with no clear strategy or direction. A Volvo that is a rebranded Zeekr, Polestars that look like Volvo’s, Zeekr’s that look like Lynk&Co..

    1. It seems to me that Geely is just releasing brands with little regard for, well anything actually.

      Anyone else remember when they bought Terrafugia? What was the thinking there?

    2. They’ve been at this for a long time –

      Geely Chinese brands
      Geely: 1998-present
      Maple: 2003-2010, 2020-present
      Gleagle: 2008-2016
      Emgrand: 2009-2014
      Englon: 2010-2013 (derived from “England London”, used as a fake British brand until they bought LTI, then gave Englon’s logo to London Taxi)
      Zhidou: 2015-2020
      Lynk & Co: 2016-present
      Geometry: 2019-present
      Livan: 2020-present
      Zeekr: 2021-present
      Radar: 2022-present
      Galaxy: 2023-present

      There really isn’t any Sloan-style brand strategy, they just kind of throw names out there randomly, and they’re rarely fully differentiated from the Geely parent company

  7. Confusing door handles aside, this would be a fantastic taxi. No idea what LEVC’s priorities are, but maybe they just wanted a weird looking fleet vehicle for that purpose?

  8. For as much of generic this minivan may be, I’m glad they don’t let China sell none of this in America – it would be the end of the american brands.
    As for us consumers, screw us I guess…

    1. Generic, plain, boring, ordinary, etc…. I almost don’t want to believe its an EV, guess the designers didn’t get the memo that EVs need to look like a jelly bean, egg, or turd. I just see a milk carton. Maybe blah plain look is the next hot thing!

    1. From the wiki page link…
      “The car was largely engineered by CEVT, a Geely subsidiary in Gothenburg, Sweden.[1]”

      Seems Geely has more sub brands and subsidies than GM in the 1960s

  9. I still can’t believe LEVC is the absolute best name they could come up with- not that Carbodies or LTI were all that great, but what was wrong with London Taxi? (Geez, that company’s been renamed a lot in not too many years, hasn’t it?)

    No unclaimed, unprotected British heritage trademark out there to claim? Maybe Beardmore? Try to do a deal with SAIC to get Austin?

    1. Hear hear. “London Taxi” should be the name and they should go full John Bull and plaster the Union Jack on everything. They could have special collabs with: PG Tips (with built-in teapot!), Barbour (just look at that fine upholstery!), Crocket and Jones (hand tanned leather dash!) and Doc Marten’s (Curb Stomp edition!), etc. The options are endless for milking the wallets of Anglophiles the world round.

  10. the handsome L380 doesn’t try to adopt any familiar identity at all.

    Found it!:

    “The name of the LEVC L380 is inspired by that of the Airbus A380 wide-body airliner, the world’s largest passenger aircraft, to promote the model’s spacious interior and comfort. Design cues of the minivan are also inspired by the fuselage of the plane

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LEVC_L380

    Got the specs too:

    “The L380 is powered by a single 200 kW (270 hp) motor produced by Viridi E-Mobility Technology Co. and a nickel-cobalt-manganate battery pack supplied by CATL.[3] The entry-level model’s battery pack has a capacity of 73 kWh with the top-level model’s battery having a capacity of 120 kWh. The range of the L380 is claimed to be around 600 km (370 mi). The charging time of the battery to go from 10% capacity to 80% is 30 minutes, with it reaching 200 km (120 mi) of range in 10 minutes.”

          1. True that – The TriStar was much more advanced and comfortable than the more successful DC10.

            The A380 is quite an experience – It’s so large that turbulence doesn’t seem to be a thing in the same way that the Queen Mary 2 just ignores rough seas by bridging the waves with it’s great length and breadth.

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