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2006 Toyota Yaris LE 5-door Hatchback Road Test

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Khatir Soltani
Building A Better Subcompact Car

It was a cold, wet September morning in Barrie, Ontario when I first
Yaris, meet Canada. Canada, meet Yaris. (Photo: Justin Couture, Canadian Auto Press)
met the new Toyota Yaris: a Bayou Blue metallic 5-door hatchback in LE trim, the exact model and trim which would reflect the buying habits of the masses. It also happened to be a lot like the car that is the subject of this review. Despite being the fact that it was humbly introduced in the yard of a local college, where the most scantily clad woman on the premises were wearing sweat shirts and bubble vests, the opposite to bronzed models at a glamorous international autoshow, this didn't undermine the fact that out of dozens and dozens of markets that Toyota would eventually sell the car, that it made it's first appearance, outside of Japan, not in Europe or the US, but here in Canada.

In
(Photo: Justin Couture)
The Yaris is one of the finest inner-city automobiles you can drive. (Photo: Justin Couture, Canadian Auto Press)
many ways the Yaris and Canada were made for each other. Compared to our neighbors south of the border, we're much more in tune with our European roots which explains why there are so many compact cars running about on our streets. Here, compact and subcompact cars make up nearly half of all automobiles ales, and it's a figure that's growing with each and every passing year. The bottom line is that cars are just more expensive to own and operate, north of the fourty nine, be it in terms of fuel or insurance. This might explain why we also received the first generation Yaris, the Echo Hatchback; something the states were deprived of.

Unlike most of the road test evaluations we conduct, which,
(Photo: Justin Couture)
Once again the Yaris hatch is a bit of a specialty to our great nation. At least in five-door form. (Photo: Justin Couture, Canadian Auto Press)
generally speaking last about a week, the Yaris stayed with us for an extended period of time. For three weeks, I lived with the most basic, five-door hatchback model, the LE, painted in a cheeky, copper-orange colour. Out of the range that includes the standard palette of red, white, silver, black and blue, the orange delivers that bright, sunny burst of colour which matches the car's energetic personality. Initially from the time of its launch, the car was available in five and three-door hatchback designs, but, for 2007, a four-door notchback sedan was added. Interestingly, the five-door hatchback is an exclusive model to Canada; only the sedan and three-door will be sold in the United States, as to not encroach on Toyota's youthful US-only Scion brand.

Whether you like it or not, the new Yaris is something you're gonna
(Photo: Justin Couture)
The little details, such as these tail lamps keep the Yaris looking trim and neat. (Photo: Justin Couture, Canadian Auto Press)
have to get used to seeing. Its snubbed-nose face, with wide-eyed headlamps leaves a cheeky and somewhat more effeminate impression than the car it replaces. But beneath the new sheetmetal, it still looks like the old Echo at heart; it was designed by Toyota's European styling studio in Brussels, but the same people that gave use the Echo hatch. The new Yaris also has a lot more flair to its body, with all sorts of different contorted surfaces in the form of ridges, creases and parabolic shapes, and clever accents, such as the honeycomb grille, and fish-scale tail light bezels. It may be true that the Yaris' stature is more upright than previously, but it's tapered profile shows that there really aren't any box-like shapes in its design.
Khatir Soltani
Khatir Soltani
Automotive expert
  • Over 6 years experience as a car reviewer
  • Over 50 test drives in the last year
  • Involved in discussions with virtually every auto manufacturer in Canada