Chevrolet HHR Belleville MI

The Chevrolet HHR is a car-based retro-wagon that celebrates its Chevy heritage with styling inspired by the iconic 1949 Suburban. HHR stands for Heritage High Roof, a reference to the early high-roofed Suburbans and panel trucks that inspired the design of the HHR.

Local Companies

Atchinson Ford Sales Inc
(734) 697-0001
9800 Belleville Rd
Belleville, MI
Wise Randy Ford Inc
(248) 627-3730
968 S Ortonville Rd
Ortonville, MI
Three Oaks Ford
(269) 756-2081
6736 US Highway 12
Three Oaks, MI
Millennium Auto Sales
(586) 336-9600
150 McLean
Bruce Twp, MI
Superior Auto Sales
(906) 884-3325
850 Greenland Rd
Ontonagon, MI
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
(586) 685-1400
6555 18 Mile Rd
Sterling Heights, MI
Clean Cars & Trucks
(248) 969-8172
155 S Washington St
Oxford, MI
Dunning Subaru
(734) 662-3444
3771 Jackson Rd
Ann Arbor, MI
Winter's Truck Sales
(989) 872-3103
8647 Van Dyke Rd
Cass City, MI
Martin Buick-Olds
(810) 232-2700
2530 Owen Rd
Fenton, MI

Provided by:

Find at new and used cars at CarsDirect.com

By New Car Test Drive
Retrowagen gets more performance.

Introduction

The Chevrolet HHR is a car-based retro-wagon that celebrates its Chevy heritage with styling inspired by the iconic 1949 Suburban. HHR stands for Heritage High Roof, a reference to the early high-roofed Suburbans and panel trucks that inspired the design of the HHR.

Based on the same platform as the Chevrolet Cobalt, the HHR was first launched as a 2006 model. The HHR competes most closely with the Chrysler PT Cruiser, but also with Honda Element, Ford Escape, and Jeep Liberty.

For 2008, the HHR lineup gets a new high-performance SS model.

We found the Chevy HHR fun to drive. It isn't a sports car, but it's nimble and we were pleased with its acceleration. The HHR feels more responsive than its horsepower, torque, and transmission ratio numbers suggest. Plus, it gets decent fuel economy.

The HHR Panel Van features smooth, windowless side panels and rear cargo doors with no handles. The rear cargo doors open via an instrument panel button. While it's more Spartan inside and provides seating for only two, the Panel best exemplifies the early Suburban heritage.

The HHR SS is the most fun to drive, launching quickly off the line and offering sharp handling. On an autocross circuit, we found it handled like a sports car.

The HHR interior isn't as functional as we'd like, however. And the base cloth fabric left us wishing we'd ordered the optional leather.

The Chevrolet HHR remains relatively unchanged for 2007 with the exception of slightly more powerful engines and a few additional new color choices. New exterior color options for 2007 include Imperial Blue Metallic and Golden Teal Metallic; a new interior color option is Ebony.

Read Review at NewCarTestDrive.com