Jaguar I-Pace review: Pace and grace hint at promising electric future for Jaguar

The Jaguar I-Pace Electric vehicle looks as good in the flesh as it did in an art exhibit. The Jaguar I-Pace Electric vehicle looks as good in the flesh as it did in an art exhibit.
The Jaguar I-Pace Electric vehicle looks as good in the flesh as it did in an art exhibit.
How does the striking Jaguar I-Pace luxury electric vehicle compare with Tesla on range? What’s the price and how fast does it charge?

The last time I saw a Jaguar I-Pace up close was in Dundee’s stunning V&A design museum as a bonafide art exhibit. Hewn from clay, the life-sized model’s presence in the 21st century home of Scottish design excellence felt wholly appropriate.

Like the famous building at the heart of Dundee’s waterfront, the Jaguar is a striking combination of curves and angles, imposing in scale and suggestive of power. As the V&A is a focal point for the regeneration of Dundee so the I-Pace is a symbol of the brand Jaguar wants to become in the 21st century - modern, desirable, unique.

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The I-Pace concept made its debut at motoring shows back in 2016 and the production car remains faithful to that bold design. Here in the present, a mere five years later, Teslas and all-electric models from mainstream manufacturers are commonplace enough that they are no longer considered rarities - but the I-Pace looks as futuristic now as it did when surrounded by the press in Los Angeles.

The Jaguar i-Pace electric vehicle is slightly smaller than the Jaguar F-Pace SUV The Jaguar i-Pace electric vehicle is slightly smaller than the Jaguar F-Pace SUV
The Jaguar i-Pace electric vehicle is slightly smaller than the Jaguar F-Pace SUV

The interior of our top-spec HSE test model looks and feels every inch the premium model one would expect from the price tag. Those materials not leather-covered or brushed aluminium are soft-touch or high-gloss and, as modern as it feels with the wide-screen media monitor and digital instrument display, the layout is fairly traditional by EV standards. The I-Pace might have been designed as an EV from the ground up, but from the chunky and reassuringly solid cabin it feels like a luxury SUV first, and a display of high-tech eco-engineering second.

Close the door and you feel far away from the outside world, the cabin is so quiet and, in motion, the I-Pace feels immune to the worst of the wind noise and drag that plagues many electric vehicles. Like all EVs, the Jaguar lacks the rumble of an internal combustion engine to mask exterior noise, but the acoustic laminated glass windscreen - standard across the I-Pace range - and aerodynamic shape insulate the cabin from most of it.

And you can block out the rest with the Meridian surround-sound audio system that comes with the top-spec HSE trim level, along with unique 20-inch gloss black alloy wheels, matrix LED headlights, Windsor leather interior and an upgrade to 16-way adjustable front seats from an eight-mode set-up.

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Exterior dimensions are 4,682mm by 1,895mm, which puts it slightly smaller than Jaguar’s more traditional SUV the F-Pace, and that presence actually does translate to decent space inside for both driver and passengers. Head and leg room is good in the back seat for most adults although, due to the chunky dashboard fittings, plush upholstery and small rear windows it does feel cosier than it ought to. The driver’s position isn't as domineering as it might be in some SUVs and I felt the chunky A-pillars obscured the view a touch at times at the periphery.

The high, swooping rear windscreen looks terrific from the outside but the view through it is fairly limited. Thankfully, the high-definition view from the forward and rear-facing parking cameras is crystal clear and provides a great view of your surroundings. My one criticism of the system is the overly-cautious parking sensors that scream blue murder with acres of space to spare. The I-Pace is a big car, but it’s not that big.

Powered by a 90KWh battery that drives two independent electric motors, the four-wheel drive I-Pace is no lumbering milk float. Developing 395bhp and 513lb ft of torque the Jaguar is capable of a 0-62mph time of 4.8 seconds - that’s the same as an Aston Martin Rapide S V12.