Honda Performance Development Talks Future Plans, Including Civic and NSX
HPD's Next Project Will be the CivicWith the Honda CR-Z HPD Street Performance concept, the automaker is signaling its intention to offer factory performance parts for its cars, something that despite the ubiquity of Honda tuning, the company has never really done. Honda Performance Development (HPD) is responsible for developing the parts that, for now, will be sold as dealer- or customer-installed aftermarket parts, but the division known for its racing success has bigger dreams than that.
"The overall goal, or I guess I should say the dream, would be to have a factory assembled vehicle with the HPD performance parts assembled on the line so the customer would be able to tick off a box and have the features and options of the performance version from the factory," said HPD's Manager of Street Performance, Philip LaPointe. "I think that's a stretch goal."
"For the time being," he continued, "we're going to focus on the dealer-installed parts. ... With the EPA, it's getting more and more difficult with emissions and the fuel economy is getting more and more difficult. From the OEM side, we want to have really green cars, very clean for the environment, and it's very difficult to deliver performance at the same time. As a dealer-installed part, we have some opportunities to give them some more performance."
That's precisely what HPD did with the CR-Z, arguably the car in Honda's lineup that most needed their help. HPD's supercharger kit not only takes an estimated two seconds off the zero-to-60 mph time, but doesn't void your warranty like purely aftermarket solutions might. The results are impressive, no doubt, but when you're launching a new performance brand, why start with such a niche product?
"We wanted this program because we wanted to develop the systems and processes in place before we tackle the larger project, like the Civic, because the Civic we want to guarantee success of the program," LaPointe says. "Tackling a smaller volume product like this first allows us to develop those processes and skills to ready ourselves."
It didn't hurt, either, that the request for an HPD CR-Z came from the top. When Japan said no to a big engine, non-hybrid CR-Z Si, the president of American Honda asked HPD to step in.
"Throughout the project we've had executive management support, which I think is very key, because there's been maybe not as much support in the past, but we had full support for this project," LaPointe said.



