MUNICH—The sedan is not quite dead—at least not yet. While it’s true that car buyers are voting with their wallets and opting for crossovers and SUVs, not every automaker has given up on the form factor, even when it comes to electric vehicles. For example, Audi’s next EV will be the new A6 e-tron, which goes on sale in the US next year.
The pedants might quibble with calling the A6 e-tron a sedan, as the one we’re getting here is a midsize five-door, meaning it has a rear hatch instead of a trunk. In Audi lingo, that means it’s an A6 Sportback e-tron, with more of a two-box rather than three-box shape like the outgoing (internal combustion engine-powered) A6. Not that that’s a bad thing in our eyes—the rear hatch will make it easier to load or unload larger items (like a bicycle) into the cargo area.
“We were determined to give the A6 e-tron the attractive proportions of the concept car,” said Audi designer Wolf Seebers. “I’m talking about the classic Sportback silhouette that Audi fans are familiar with,” Seebers said.
Getting that silhouette wasn’t especially easy. One reason that automakers and their designers have gravitated away from sedans as they make EVs is that it’s a lot easier to package a slab of lithium-ion batteries between the axles when you have the extra height of a crossover or SUV to play with.
For the Porsche Taycan (and Audi e-tron GT, built on the same J1 platform), that meant laying out the battery so there were voids that created space for the rear passengers to put their feet, wonderfully translated from the German as “foot garages.”

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