Next BMW 3 Series Spied

Next BMW 3 Series Spied

Our German spy photographer has snapped the clearest images yet of BMW's next-generation 3 Series.

According to the photographer, this 3 Series prototype has been doing the rounds for more than six months, but this is the first time we've managed to get a peek inside. Also, it appears to be trying out a new front bumper design. 

The interior appears to follow an evolutionary design theme, with a similarly stacked central control layout. The big news is likely a move to more digital instrumentation (at the very least, part-digital/part-analogue) and the iDrive info-tainment screen seems both larger and more upright.


Interior doesn't appear to stray too far away from the current design.

It is way too early to start making definitive statements regarding the likely model line-up, but word from Europe is that the model designations will remain largely the same as they are currently. Based on the brand's new CLAR architecture, the areas of focus will apparently be; a longer wheelbase and wider track for more space, lower centre of gravity, lighter weight, adaptive suspension, switchable anti-roll bars, torque vectoring, OLED/Laser lighting and semi-autonomous driving technology. 

Rumours suggest the 320i will get the new B46-coded 2.0-litre turbopetrol engine while the 340i is likely to be labelled the M340i.

Any new 3 Series is bound to make headlines, as it arguably remains the Munich-based firm's most important model. This new, G20-designated model, is expected to be launched in 2018, and will reach South Africa shortly after international introduction.

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Hannes Oosthuizen

Hannes Oosthuizen

With the ultimate goal of spending his life writing about cars, Hannes studied journalism at the University of Stellenbosch. A brief stint as a sports editor for Paarl Post followed, before he joined CAR magazine in 2001. He eventually became the (youngest-ever) editor of CAR in 2011, a position he occupied for two years. During his career at CAR he became a member of the WCOTY (World Car of the Year) panel, wrote a book (Cranked Up: Confessions of a Petrolhead) and was named by the Mail & Guardian as one of the Top 200 South Africans to take to lunch in its 2008 Youth Day supplement, and by The Media magazine as one of the most influential media professionals under 40 (2012). He left CAR in 2013 to experience the \other\" side of the industry

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