:Passport (automobile dealership)
{{Short description|Defunct Canadian automobile dealer network}}
{{Infobox company
| fate = Dissolved
| name = Passport International Automobiles
| logo = Passport Logo.jpg
| caption =
| logo_size = 200px
| foundation = {{Start date and age|1987}}
| defunct = {{End date and age|1991}}
| type =
| industry = Automotive
| products =
| successor = Asüna
| parent = General Motors
}}
Passport International Automobiles (PIA) was a Canadian car dealership network owned by General Motors. It sold vehicles from Isuzu and Saab as well as its own branded Passport Optima, a Korean (Daewoo) made badge engineered Opel Kadett E, starting in model year 1988. General Motors' Geo import brand was introduced in the United States at about the same time. Sales began in mid-1987, originally only in major metropolitan areas.{{cite book |ref=WYB90 |title=Ward's Automotive Yearbook 1990 |publisher=Ward's Communications, Inc |location=Detroit, MI |editor-last1 = Stark | editor-first1 = Harry A. | editor-last2 = Bush | editor-first2 = James W. | volume = 52 | date = 1990 | page = 248 | isbn = ((0910589010)) }} Only 83 I-Marks and Optimas were sold in 1987.{{cite book | ref = WYB89 | title = Ward's Automotive Yearbook 1989 | publisher = Ward's Communications, Inc | location = Detroit, MI |editor-last = Stark | editor-first = Harry A. | volume = 51 | date = 1989 | page = 202 | isbn = ((0910589009)) }}
Overview
The Optima was offered in either hatchback or sedan and achieved 52mpg on the highway. It was designed by European Opel and had a slew of standard features for a relatively low price. The Optima sedan represented a minority of the sales, while the hatchback remains more common.{{Cite web |date=2023-12-02 |title=Are All Replacement Windshields The Same Quality? |url=https://ramautoglass.ca/are-all-replacement-windshields-the-same-quality/ |access-date=2024-12-01 |language=en}} However, fewer than 500 Optimas were registered for road use in Canada as of 2012. Sales of the Optima were rather slow and with relatively low survival rates, the Optima is a rare sight today. Very few pictures document the existence of the Optima. Passport also distributed the Isuzu I-Mark, the Isuzu Trooper, and the Isuzu Pickup. Sales in 1988 were 2,006 Optima and I-Mark, 2,150 trucks. In 1989 sales more than doubled, to 5,087 cars and 4,204 trucks. GM's new, import-fighting Saturn division chose Passport to sell its new car beginning in mid-1992.
General Motors Canada, however, changed its branding strategy in 1991 and disbanded the Passport division. The Optima sedan and hatchbacks were rebadged as the Asüna SE and Asüna GT. Isuzu was grouped together with Saab and Saturn to form Saturn-Saab-Isuzu dealerships.
Passport's sibling, Geo, carried on until 1998 while another GM import brand, Asüna, debuted for model year 1992 but lasted only two model years.{{citation needed|date=June 2021}}
Models
Gallery
File:Passport Optima GSi (6810302205).jpg|Passport Optima GSi in a junkyard
File:Passport Optima GSi wheel (6810301257).jpg|Passport Optima GSi wheel
File:Passport Optima GLS sedan front.jpg|Passport Optima GLS Sedan front
File:Passport Optima GLS Sedan rear.jpg|Passport Optima GLS Sedan rear
File:Passport Optima GLS sedan window stickers.jpg|Passport window sticker
References
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{{General Motors brands}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Passport (Automobile Dealership)}}
Category:General Motors marques
Category:Auto dealerships of Canada
Category:Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1988
Category:Retail companies established in 1988
Category:Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1991