Martin Love 

Alpine A110: ‘The perfect car to escape to the country’

Neat, nimble and light… the reborn Alpine A110 has everything you need to tackle Devon’s toughest roads, says Martin Love
  
  

alpine a110 parked on the green grass in front of country hotel in the background
‘The handling is bewitching’: the Alpine A110 takes a breather on the lawns of Gidleigh Park in Dartmoor Photograph: Martin Love/PR Company Handout

Alpine A110
Price
£46,905
0-62mph
4.5 seconds
Top speed
155mph
MPG
46
CO2
144g/km

The long, winding drive that leads up to Gidleigh Park in the heart of Dartmoor is less a road and more an automotive assault course. Dark, twisting, narrow, steep, flooded, blind-cornered, high-banked… The lane doesn’t so much follow the contours of the land as thrash about on it like a netted eel. It’s so arduous that halfway along, the hotel has nailed an encouraging notice to a tree: “Keep heart, you are still en route!” My wife and I were celebrating a milestone anniversary and had decided to treat ourselves to a night at the hotel. We laughed at the sign: it seemed like sage advice for a long, winding marriage, too.

Gidleigh Park was an inspired choice. My wife was drawn by the fact the lavish Arts and Craft house sits in 107 acres of woodland on the banks of the Teign river and has a chef, Chris Simpson, who has just won a Michelin star for his vibrant cooking. I, however, was drawn by the chance to put a very different star through its own breathtaking paces on Devon’s tough-mudder roads – Renault’s vivacious Alpine A110.

If you are of a certain age, you might remember the bug-eyed, bottle-blue, French, two-seat rally car that tore to victory in the 1973 World Rally Championships. The Alpine already had other titles under its belt from the 50s and 60s, but that was its breakthrough moment and it sealed its place in the hearts of race fans everywhere.

Now, the Alpine A110 is back and it’s stayed true to many of its original winning traits. It’s incredibly light. It is aluminium bodied and has an aluminium chassis. “If we have low mass, we can have moderate power,” says Alpine’s Thierry Annequin. “Which means we don’t need super wide tyres or big, heavy brakes and so on. We have chased all grams everywhere on each component and every system.” What Thierry means is that a small nut doesn’t need a big hammer to crack it. So the relatively modest, turbocharged 1.8-litre petrol engine, which sits behind the driver, lends the car a wonderful sense of poise and balance. Floor the throttle and you feel you are being pushed rather than pulled – like a giant hand in the centre of your back.

The ride and handling is bewitching – and yet also remarkably composed for a such a dinky car. The lightweight guys tend to bounce around on rutted tarmac or get buffeted by crosswinds, but somehow the Alpine remains wonderfully grounded. It flows across all surfaces – even over the dreadful gutters and grooves that scarify Devon’s sinuous lanes.

Inside you’ll recognise some familiar kit from Renault – though nowhere on the car is its French parent even alluded to, which seems a little rude. The leather sports seats and steering wheel are comfortable and tactile. My favourite detail is the auto gearbox. You select either D, N or R simply by pressing one of the three circular buttons. In hospital a patient’s DNR instruction spells the end, but here the letters are an open invitation to grab life and zoom towards it.

After hours of joyously slaloming across Dartmoor in the little Alpine, we arrived into the warm embrace of Gidleigh Park. At the reception desk we were given our key by the friendly hotel manager: “Many of our rooms are named after local tors,” he said with a smile. “You will be in Laughter.” Who wouldn’t be?

Overnight stays at Gidleigh Park start from £275 per double room, b&b, with packages also regularly offered. Keep an eye on the website for latest offers (gidleigh.co.uk; 01647 432 367)

Email Martin at martin.love@observer.co.uk or follow him on Twitter @MartinLove166

 

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