The Last Pontiac Was Built Yesterday...

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Lifer
Jan 7, 2002
12,755
3
0
Pontiac reaches end of the line

David Phillips / Special  to The Detroit News

Orion Township -- The ride is over for the brand that put rolling excitement on the road for generations of Americans.
General Motors Co. built the last Pontiac for the U.S. market Wednesday: a white, G6 sedan that rolled off the assembly line in Orion Township around 12:45 p.m.
There was no cake or commemorative banner or senior GM official on hand, and no media were allowed: just a group of "final process" workers to oversee the last 100 G6 models assembled.
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"We're focused on a quality build-out for the customer," said GM spokesman Kevin Nadrowski.
Many workers stopped to pose for photos with the last cars as they moved down the assembly line.
It was a subdued goodbye for an 82-year-old brand that debuted under the bright lights of the New York Auto Show in 1926.
GM announced in April that it would phase out Pontiac as part of a bailout orchestrated by the U.S. government.
Unlike the last Oldsmobile, an Alero signed by hundreds of plant workers and donated to the R.E. Olds Transportation Museum in Lansing, the final G6 models will be sold as part of a fleet order.
For some Pontiac enthusiasts, it's an inglorious ending for a car line that popularized Silver Streak styling in the 1930s and defined the muscle car era.
The Orion Township plant will be idled and retooled to produce a new small car in 2011.
"We want to survive the next 18 months until we start building GM's next small car," said Pat Sweeney, president of UAW Local 5960, the union that represents workers at the factory.
Sweeney said it was a bittersweet time for the plant's 2,400 employees.
Many of the same workers were building the Oldsmobile Aurora sedan when GM decided to discontinue Olds in December 2000.
In December, the automaker will end production of the Pontiac G3 Wave, a subcompact built in Mexico and sold only in Canada -- marking the official end of production for the brand.
Launched in 1926 as a companion to GM's Oakland division, Pontiac is the third best-selling automobile line of all time in the United States, behind Chevrolet and Ford.
Under GM's brand hierarchy, it was slotted above Chevrolet and below Oldsmobile, and was favored for years by schoolteachers, the cast of "I Love Lucy," and other middle-class wage earners.
But it was during the 1960s that the division came into its own, capitalizing on America's growing thirst for racing and unbridled performance with muscle cars such as the GTO and Firebird.
More than any other GM brand, Pontiac epitomized performance, speed and sex appeal.
"It was the car teenage boys lusted after and teenage girls hoped to be seen in," said Bob Casey, automotive historian and curator of transportation at The Henry Ford museum in Dearborn.
Rivals were forced to follow with similar muscle cars, giving Detroit automakers bragging rights over the cars that Japanese rivals were marketing based on fuel economy, quality and reliability.
Pontiac's U.S. sales peaked in 1984 at almost 850,000 vehicles, roughly four times as many as it sold last year.
For some Pontiac fans, the beginning of the end came during the 1970s, when fuel economy concerns forced GM and other automakers to downsize cars.
Foreign competition and a lack of differentiation from other GM models steadily eroded Pontiac's customer base.
As its U.S. market share steadily dropped from around 50 percent in the 1960s, analysts repeatedly called for GM to trim its bloated lineup and focus on two or three divisions.
As it did with Oldsmobile in the 1990s, GM tried to resurrect Pontiac in recent years with new rear-wheel drive performance models such as the G8 sports sedan and the Solstice roadster.
Venerable names and models like Bonneville, Grand Prix, Firebird and Grand Am were retired.
But it also continued to market vehicles such as the G3, G5 and Torrent that were not much different than Chevy models. And it relied too heavily on fleet customers and struggled to become profitable again.
"Most Pontiacs haven't been hot in years," Casey said. "The consumption ladder that GM used for years -- a car for every purse and purpose -- no longer worked in the U.S. market."
 

MrMatt

Banned
Mar 3, 2009
3,905
7
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Well yeah, you neuter the brand and this is what happened. Savvy like this is why GM is doing so well. Kill your most appealing and only profitable brand. Good move.
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
18,943
571
126
This is one of the casualties of GM's management approach that required brands to compete with each other while simultaneously preventing them from being too competitive with each other. i.e. we want you to compete only to the extent that you don't encroach upon each other's traditional customer base, a difficult task when you are forcing many of the brands to use the same platform.

e.g. GM actually prevented Buick from publishing accurate horsepower and performance figures for the Grand National and GNX because it was faster than both the Camaro and Corvette and would make Chevy look bad. Buick, Pontiac, and Olds were no longer supposed to do muscle cars, that became Chevy's exclusive market, even though all three had successfully done them in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s.

Personally, I liked the H-Body Bonneville platform (which was also used by Olds) before GM ruined it in 2000.
 

geno

Lifer
Dec 26, 1999
25,074
4
0
Well yeah, you neuter the brand and this is what happened. Savvy like this is why GM is doing so well. Kill your most appealing and only profitable brand. Good move.

Neuter? How has Pontiac been neutered especially compared to any other floundering branch of GM?
 

TrueBlueLS

Platinum Member
Jul 13, 2001
2,931
1
0
Although the G8 will live on as the "new" Chevy Caprice, it is sad to see the Pontiac line go. I see many Grand Prixs, Grand Ams, and G6s around where I live. Although I'm not a complete fan of the front bumper on the Solstice, that is one car that GM should have saved and rebranded like the G8.
 

Pegun

Golden Member
Jan 18, 2004
1,334
0
71
The reason why GM failed isn't because of Pontiac, rather they failed because they were strong 30 years ago and relied too much on those strengths. They got fat and lazy and let the korean/japanese brands come in and blow them away by striving to always be better than themselves , not others.
 

DivideBYZero

Lifer
May 18, 2001
24,117
2
0
MG - GM. They have a very similar history separated by a few years, except GM will probably survive without being swallowed whole at any point in the future.
 

Fenixgoon

Lifer
Jun 30, 2003
33,331
12,913
136
a sad day, namely because the G8 and solstice were/are excellent cars, G8 in particular. The GTO is a great car (I want one now) if a bit boring on the exterior. Still a steal though.

If Pontiac ever gets revived, I hope GM just makes them Holden imports. Great performance, price, and looks.
 

BillGates

Diamond Member
Nov 30, 2001
7,388
2
81
In related news, plastic factories worldwide are now overflowing and spilling out into the countryside.
 

Zedtom

Platinum Member
Nov 23, 2001
2,146
0
0
Before the Aztec, most people were neutral about the nameplate. The Solstice and G8 started to generate a buzz, but the gross miscalculation of the Aztec styling tainted the whole division.
 

Ken g6

Programming Moderator, Elite Member
Moderator
Dec 11, 1999
16,700
4,661
75
Now I'll never have a car to match my name. :(
 

scorp00

Senior member
Mar 21, 2001
994
0
71
I had a firebird formula and have this trans am now. Great cars and the Pontiac styling was way better than Chevy's.

pic
 

geno

Lifer
Dec 26, 1999
25,074
4
0
a sad day, namely because the G8 and solstice were/are excellent cars, G8 in particular. The GTO is a great car (I want one now) if a bit boring on the exterior. Still a steal though.

Though not the same, obviously, the G8 will live on as the Chevy Caprice, in a sense. Depending on what happens to Saturn, the Sky may continue to be the Solstice. And I thought the GTO was long gone from production at this point? So, all in all, the good platforms still stand a chance.
 

xanis

Lifer
Sep 11, 2005
17,571
8
0
I've never owned a Pontiac product and I feel no nostalgia. I think I'm sadder about Mininova shutting down than about this.
 

Squisher

Lifer
Aug 17, 2000
21,204
66
91
:(

I owned a '69 Catalina and for a big car it knew how to get out of its own way. 4000 lbs. of rolling thunder. :D

When Roger Smith deemed all GM divisions to built cookie cutter versions of cars from the other divisions it was the beginning of the end for Pontiac and Olds.
 

Fenixgoon

Lifer
Jun 30, 2003
33,331
12,913
136
Though not the same, obviously, the G8 will live on as the Chevy Caprice, in a sense. Depending on what happens to Saturn, the Sky may continue to be the Solstice. And I thought the GTO was long gone from production at this point? So, all in all, the good platforms still stand a chance.

AFAIK, the caprice is only coming as a police car. though it'd be awesome if a G8-based caprice replaced the impala.


i thought saturn was screwed becaus penske backed out?

yes, the GTO is no longer produced, but now you can get used ones for ~15k. a 4seat coupe with a 350-400hp corvette engine in it? not a bad deal :D