The Best Spy Shots For The Week Of January 2nd

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Motor1.com post spyshots of upcoming vehicles most days and sometimes more often than that. If you want to stay up to date with what’s going on, check out our quick list of development vehicles from last week.

BMW has an electric variant of the 5 Series on the way, and it’s a Touring wagon variant. It is very similar to the standard model, except for a modified front end with a smaller opening because EVs don’t have the same cooling requirements as combustion-powered vehicles.

Buick Envista is available in China and coming to the US soon. This is the first time we’ve seen the American market version, and it looks identical to the version sold overseas.

The Chevrolet Corvette features a strange exhaust design with one small diameter pipe coming out of each side. Rumors have it that the automaker is preparing a more powerful base model that can produce more than 500 horsepower.

Mercedes-Benz is providing a small refresh on the CLA-Class and its Shooting Brake counterpart. The biggest tweak is at the front where there are new headlights and a revised fascia. At the rear, the taillights get a new look.

Like the CLA, the GLB-Class also has a refresh. The recipe is also similar. There are changes to the sculpting of the front end and taillights.

This is our first good look inside the new Mercedes GLC Coupe. It features a rectangular instrument display, and an angular display dominates the center stack.

The 911 ST is based on the 911 GT3 Touring but provides tweaks such as the double-bubble roof. The model took inspiration from the limited-run 911 race cars from the early 1970s.

Toyota is preparing to expand its range of bZ electric vehicles. Styling seems to bear some resemblance to the Small SU EV concept, but the development vehicle has a lot of camouflage and body cladding to hide the look.

The Volkswagen ID.7 made its debut at CES, but the car there sports a vibrant electroluminescent camouflage that hides its design details. This one is being developed in the Arctic and wears very light camouflage.

It’s hard to tell by looking at this vehicle, but VW is working on a new Tiguan. Brand engineers cleverly hid the exterior to make the crossover look like its current iteration. The platform is reportedly an evolution of the existing foundation, and its physical footprint should be slightly larger.