GM’s Big Plan to Make Cadillac Celestiq EV in Very Small Numbers

The luxury brand’s new bespoke halo electric sedan represents a coachbuilt philosophy that dates to the early 1900s.

  • Delivery of Cadillac’s hand-built ultra-luxury four-seater is set for 2024 with at least 300 miles of range, a 55-inch infotainment megascreen, 600 hp, and a 0–60-mph sprint time estimated at 3.8 seconds.
  • The Celestiq’s target audience will be limited to those willing to pay at least $300,000 for a fancy car without an internal-combustion engine.
  • Cadillac wants to conquer super-rich customers, but has GM’s luxury brand given them a compelling reason to visit a showroom in the last 50 years?

    William Durant founded General Motors in 1908 on the idea that bigger is better, and within two years he had purchased 22 companies (including Cadillac, Buick, and Oldsmobile) and came close to acquiring Henry Ford’s operations, too. The grand vision hasn’t changed much since, as GM manufactures and sells trucks and SUVs in high volume, as well as sports cars, luxury vehicles, and battery-electrics in smaller numbers—though mainstream internal-combustion sedans and compact cars have gotten the axe in recent years.

    So it is with great curiosity that General Motors nudges its Cadillac brand—once the global standard of excellence but lately struggling to compete with modern luxury marques—and its groundbreaking Celestiq into the rarefied air of low-volume, spacious, ultra-luxury sedans, namely from Rolls-Royce and Bentley. Those two British brands were on life support not that long ago, but German ownership has given them the product investments necessary for revival.

    How is this going to work for GM and Cadillac, which have relied for decades on modern manufacturing in large, automated factories where annual volume is counted in tens of thousands (and hundreds of thousands in the case of full-size pickups)? The Celestiq’s target audience will be limited to those willing to pay at least $300,000 for a fancy car without an internal-combustion engine.

    The Celestiq’s target audience will be limited to those willing to pay at least $300,000 for a fancy car.

    The all-electric four-passenger Celestiq, revealed today in production form, is cut from a different template—a throwback to a time more than 100 years ago when open-air Cadillacs with wooden frames were hand-crafted by coachbuilders. For Celestiq’s launch in late 2023, GM has established a production facility at its Warren, Michigan, technical center where skilled assemblers will hand-build every model, at the pace of fewer than two cars a day.

    That’s about 500 cars a year—a scale and production model that the past four generations of GM employees could scarcely comprehend.

    But it’s a fully modern interpretation of Cadillac’s gloried past, as the wooden frame gives way to a metallic body-on-frame Ultium architecture that integrates a 111-kWh battery pack expected to produce 600 hp and capable of propelling this sleek, stretched sedan with an impossibly long rear overhang to 60 mph in 3.8 seconds with a two-motor all-wheel-drive powertrain, without burning a drop of gasoline.

    Cadillac Celestiq bathed in Santorini Blue leather.
    General Motors

    And those old open-air Cadillacs, although revolutionary with the first electric starter in 1912, would sound like a bucket of bolts compared to the silent vault of a cabin anticipated in the Celestiq, even at high speeds.

    The specs are impressive:

    • Range anticipated to exceed 300 miles.
    • 200-kW DC fast charging capable of adding 78 miles of range in 10 minutes.
    • Anticipated 640 lb-ft of torque.
    • Ultra Cruise for hands-free driving beyond the capability of Super Cruise, with the ultimate vision to accommodate 95% of driving situations.
    • Six large “Mega Castings” used underbody and for shock towers to reduce complexity.
    • Carbon fiber used for front and rear quarter-panels, hood, and rails, while the doors are aluminum.
    • Adaptive air suspension, Magnetic Ride Control, and up to 3.5 degrees of out-of-phase active rear steering.
    • 115 3D-printed parts, including the steering wheel and window-lift switches.
    • Five high-definition display screens inside.
    • More than 20 cameras on board.
    • A 55-inch curved-display infotainment hub stretching from pillar to pillar atop the instrument panel, with Google Maps, Google Assistant, and Google Play built in.
    • A 1000-watt 38-speaker AKG premium audio system, plus three exterior speakers.
    • 126 interior ambient lighting colors.
    • The world’s largest piece of automotive glass serving as the fixed roof, integrating suspended-particle device technology to control how much light enters the cabin.

      There are 2100 LEDs inside and outside the Celestiq, many of them mounted to the perimeter of the high-tech glass roof to illuminate the pattern embedded in the multi-layer glass, with the four quadrants capable of tinting at different levels depending on passenger preference.

      Singer Lenny Kravitz and GM design chief Michael Simcoe at Monday night’s Celestiq reveal in Los Angeles. Kravitz will drive his Celestiq as his "nighttime vehicle" in Paris.
      Dan MacMedan

      The car’s forward lighting signature—with its etched light-bar “grille” for flashy animated startup sequences—may appear similar to that of the more mainstream Cadillac Lyriq already in production. But this design concept was first part of the Celestiq show car that dates back about five years. The development team says the Celestiq’s forward lighting will be more sophisticated than that of the Lyriq, incorporating DMD projection and 1.3 million pixels per headlamp for a more theatrical startup animation.

      And how about that name? It’s pronounced sell-EST-ick and rhymes appropriately with electric. The name Celestiq is also intended to invoke thoughts of a celestial, heavenly halo. For those keeping score, that’s two Cadillac EVs that end in “iq,” after the Lyriq launched earlier this year. “Q” is becoming popular in EV nomenclature, with Hyundai using Ioniq and Mercedes-Benz using EQ in naming each brand’s battery-electric vehicles.

      There’s a hood ornament, too, but not on the hood. Cadillac’s “Goddess,” dating to the late 1920s and in use for about 30 years, reappears as a modern interpretation in digital form on one of the interior display screens at startup, on the crystal controller in the center console, and on the brushed-aluminum “Hand Built—Detroit” plate inside the driver’s door.

      2024 cadillac celestiq
      Cadillac’s iconic Goddess hood ornament from the 1930s appears on plate mounted below driver’s door of Celestiq.
      General Motors

      While the Celestiq may be sultry and magnificent with its Santorini Blue paint, luscious interior, and neck-snapping acceleration, the broader challenge might rest on the marketing side. Rolls-Royce sold more than 5500 vehicles in 2021, and Bentley sold nearly 15,000. Those brands have a history with their customers, who don’t bat an eye at dropping $300-large (or more) on a special car to join their top-shelf fleets.

      Sure, Cadillac wants to lure (or conquer?) these deep-pocketed customers, but has GM’s luxury brand given them a compelling reason to visit a showroom in the last 50 years? Automotive historians go back even further—to the 1957 Eldorado Brougham or the 1933 V16 Aerodynamic Coupe—to find Cadillacs that were lusted after by drivers everywhere.

      High-tech glass roof provides four-quadrant comfort for passengers.
      General Motors

      Perhaps this newly revived dimension for the brand is precisely what Cadillac needs to change its fortunes, to capture the imaginations of young entrepreneurs around the world. If so, perhaps that magic filters down to the next generation of mainstream vehicles like the CT5 sedan and XT6 SUV, and starts turning the heads of discerning, enthusiast shoppers who for years have been looking only in the direction of BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Audi, Lexus, Porsche, and, more recently, Tesla and Lucid.

      The Celestiq will be sold globally, and the marketing plan follows the Bentley and Rolls-Royce script, with potential “clients” coming to the build center in Warren to sip champagne or cocktails while perusing a seemingly infinite library of colors, materials, electronic content, and leather and wood types to specify exactly what their Celestiq will look like.

      Or, if the client would rather, the Celestiq’s design director, Erin Crossley, along with designer Laetitia Lopez from Cadillac Color and Trim, will fly anywhere with samples, swatches, and likely a spiffy computer with visualization software so customers can see digital representations of their bespoke cars. Serving as the brand’s ambassadors, they’re ready to log a lot of miles.

      2024 cadillac celestiq
      Cadillac’s Celestiq ambassador/concierge, Erin Crossley.
      Tom Murphy

      Either way, GM Vice President of Global Design Michael Simcoe says each Celestiq will be bespoke—whatever a paying customer wants—as if created from a blank canvas. “It’s really between the designer and the customer” to plan each build, Simcoe says. The seemingly minimalist interior design fits this approach, allowing buyers more space (and canvas) for customization.

      Crossley says she and Lopez are prepared to provide “thought starters and inspiration” to potential customers shaping their cars, “and then let them take it from there. They might see something that they love; they might want to change a couple things; they might want to change everything.”

      Cadillac’s dealers will be involved in the sales process, although the pool of U.S. showrooms has been cut in half—to about 500—as some dealers opted to leave the fold rather than invest in store upgrades to sell electric vehicles. Cadillac Global Vice President Rory Harvey says delivery plans are still being worked out, perhaps incorporating the assembly facility at the Warren tech center.

      “Customers will be able to choose where they want to take delivery of the vehicle, whether it be at their home or at a special location, or whether it be at the dealer,” Harvey says.

      The Celestiq will be available “by waitlist only,” and first customers should receive their vehicles in early 2024.

      It’s been many years since Cadillac was the best-selling luxury brand in the US. Do you think the Celestiq has the panache to boost the entire brand? Please comment below.

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