Remaining in business for 11 decades requires constant innovation, so choosing one model to represent a decade of significance can be a catalyst for debate. Among the hundreds of models designed and engineered for Buick, the 11 below stand out as the most significant for their respective decades since May 17, 1903. Let the debate begin.
- 1903-1912: The first Buick ever is quite significant, so Buick’s first decade honor goes to the 1904 Model B.
The first one of the line was sold to doctor Herbert H. Hills of Flint,
Mich., decades before the brand developed its reputation as a “doctor’s
car.”
- 1913-1922: The 1916 D-45 Touring was the top-selling
model in 1916, a year when Buick switched its lineup from four- to
six-cylinder engines. Sales tripled that year and reached six digits for
the first time. Buick became the top-selling brand in the industry a
few years later, with five-passenger touring models remaining most
popular.
- 1923-1932: The 1931 Series 50 was the best-selling
model in the year of another upsizing of powertrains – from six- to
eight-cylinder engines. The more powerful engines, paired with a major
design overhaul the year before, helped boost Buick’s image during the
Great Depression.
- 1933-1942: Harlow Curtice became Buick’s president in 1933, and three years later, a model range including the 1936 Century
showed his revolutionary vision for the brand. Its streamlined designs
were a dramatic change and Buick’s engines grew more powerful, making
the Century the first Buick to reach 100 mph. Sales grew from 53,249 in
1935 to 168,596 in 1936 and continued to rise in the years to come.
- 1943-1952: Buick’s most iconic design features, including signature waterfall grilles and portholes, date to the 1949 Roadmaster. One of the most collectible Buicks of all time, the Roadmaster even became a Hollywood star in the 1988 film Rain Man.
- 1953-1962: Buick celebrated its 50th birthday with the 1953 Skylark,
an opulent, limited-production convertible with advanced design and
technology. Each had Italian wire wheels and the owner’s name engraved
on the steering wheel. The same year also marked the first year of Buick
V-8 engines and a new twin-turbine Dynaflow automatic transmission.
- 1963-1972: Buick’s most famous production design is the 1963 Riviera,
a powerful sport coupe said to be inspired by a Rolls-Royce that Buick
design boss Bill Mitchell saw through a fog in London. It energized a
brand emerging from a period of design criticism.
- 1973-1982: Amid an oil crisis, the 1975 Regal offered a
standard V-6 engine at a time when other mid-size sedans offered only
gas-thirstier V-8s. Buick still leads the way in the downsizing trend,
offering four-cylinder engines on four of its five 2013 models.
- 1983-1992: Buick’s lightweight, high-tech V-6 engines, mixed
with the brand’s success in NASCAR, resulted in the brand’s most iconic
performance car, the 1987 GNX. Its 276-hp turbocharged and intercooled V-6 delivered 0-60 mph acceleration in just 4.6 seconds, according to Car and Driver magazine.
- 1993-2002: A 1999 Century was Buick’s first model
built in China for the local market. Although Buick has a long
reputation as a prestigious brand in China (one in six cars on Shanghai
roads in 1930 were Buicks, according to the city’s government,)
production there has driven the brand’s success over the past decade.
China is now Buick’s largest market, with 700,007 vehicles sold in 2012.
- 2003-2012: The 2008 Enclave luxury crossover ushered in Buick’s current design language and brand focus. Along with the LaCrosse luxury sedan, which went on sale as a 2010 model, the Enclave introduced buyers to a new era of Buicks with leading design, quietness, quality and safety.
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