Lexus Stuffs GR Engine Up the Nose of a Small Crossover

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

You know what’s great about gearheads being at the helm of a car company instead of dour bedwetting accountants? Entertaining product tends to crop up, that’s what. And while the machine shown here is not intended for the North American market, we think there could be a case for it on this side of the pond.


This is the Lexus LBX, a tiny machine which is nearly a foot shorter than the already diminutive UX crossover that’s been on sale in America for a spell. At the Tokyo Auto Salon happening right now in, well, Tokyo, Lexus showed off an LBX Morizo RR Concept which takes much in terms of powertrain from the hyperactive GR line of grin-makers.


A turbocharged 1.6-liter three-cylinder engine making about 300 horsepower puts power to all four wheels through an electronically controlled AWD system and Direct Shift eight-speed automatic transmission. Lexus says “all key elements” of the car have been honed for performance compared to a stock LBX, including tweaks made to the suspension and tires. We see some aero changes to the body on this concept car, alterations which were apparently ripped from lessons learned through technologies in the world of high-speed air racing.

The model, a concept for now, was created with direct input from Toyota Motor Corporation Chairman and Master Driver Akio Toyoda – also known as “Morizo”. Remember the gearhead versus accountant shade thrown above? Yeah, that’s where those differences come into clear play. Chairman Toyoda is a huge part of the reason Toyota as a brand is finally and mercifully crawling away from years of Big Beige, with tremendous cars like the Supra and GR Corolla forming cornerstones of a march back to sportiness.


What do you think? Would this type of machine add to the Lexus brand in our market or would it dilute its focus in a showroom filled with three-row crossovers and large luxury vehicles? 


[Images: Lexus]

Become a TTAC insider. Get the latest news, features, TTAC takes, and everything else that gets to the truth about cars first by  subscribing to our newsletter.

Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

Comments
Join the conversation
4 of 27 comments
  • Jalop1991 Jalop1991 on Jan 12, 2024

    This is the Lexus LBX, a tiny machine which is nearly a foot shorter than the already diminutive UX crossover


    ...which makes the LBX the length of my 2017 GTI. Which made me look harder.


    The UX is otherwise VERY VERY similar to my GTI dimensionally, inside and out, save for the height--the UX is 4 inches taller.


    These things are very slowly coming back down to "we're getting back into the standard hatchback market". And I welcome that.


    300bhp? If it has any decent driving dynamics, and still has buttons and knobs inside, I'd be all over this if they brought it here.

  • Abraham Abraham on Jan 16, 2024

    I haven’t been paying attention but it seems that every single Toyota model has a Lexus counterpart. That is not how this story began…. There was a time when a Lexus had a nice interior with real wood and very comfortable seats and an amazing amount of sound insulation and a plush but controlled ride. Those were nice to drive. I had one - you could drive all day and get out and not feel the hum of the highway still reverberating in your head. Now they’re all just poorly styled sh!t cans with crap interiors, harsh rides and the mere appearance of quality. But the price remains high.

  • TheMrFreeze The American auto industry is the last large vestige of our once great industrial power...a nation like ours NEEDS industrial power of this type to survive. Case in point, at the beginning of the pandemic, when PPE and ventilators were desperately needed and our only source was China, it was the US automakers who quickly pivoted to start manufacturing them. No other industry in this country has the skill or manufacturing capabilities to do that.When you take this into consideration, plus the fact that Chinese automakers are financially supported by the CCP while US automakers function as fully free market entities, I have zero problem with a huge tariff being placed on Chinese vehicles to level the playing field. I do think, however, that the government then has the right to "remind" the Big 3 that it's now up to them to provide the affordable vehicles to fill the void the Chinese would have filled.
  • Fahrvergnugen Don't knock the Chinese so loudly. They are listening, and reading everything, keeping Naughty and Nice lists.
  • Redapple2 2026 f1 cars. Even more crappie! Tune in!F1 is crap. Garbage racing.1 must use 2 types of tires2 cant refuel3 DRS - only in certain places. in certain situations. on certain days of the week. and.... 4 same team wins 90% of races.Go IMSA !!!! or Moto GPPS- Historic Monaco races last weekend were spectacular. All 10 hr on TV.
  • Redapple2 volume meets or exceeds expectations......................... But, they always give you high annual volume to quote so they get a cheaper price. You have to tool up to that volume (costing you extra$) because if that part number reaches that volume and you cant meet it? Whao unto you. After getting burned by gm 10 yrs ago, we moved to heavy truck and agriculture products only. Steady volumes. More profits. 30 net payment. The vampire is up to 90-120 days now? Never big 3 work. Ever !
  • Tedward I was hypothetically annoyed about this until it happened to my wife. Watching her face twist into disbelieving rage once she realized that gm had sold her data to an insurance company after buying a very nice Cadillac was an eye opener though. If anyone wants a peek at the reputational damage done look at her. GM turned a manual BW purchase (and she's head over heels in love with it) into a non event as far as recos and future purchase considerations go. That's a heavy lift. I mean, she'd buy another manual BW, but there's zero talk about gm cars in general coming from her, in stark contrast to her VW love while she had her gti.
Next