Buick cars have always measured up pretty well in the prestige arena, but it's been decades since this division has produced a noteworthy design.
That is one of the reasons the redesigned Riviera caused such a stir when it rolled into showrooms last year. This big, bold front-wheel-drive luxury coupe makes a striking contrast to the rest of the Buick lineup, including recent generations of the Riviera itself.
There's more. Not only does the Riviera break new ground in a very fancy field, it does so at a price that should make some of its competitors blush. Although this is clearly a luxury car, its price range straddles the $30,000 luxury frontier. Key rivals such as the Acura Legend, Cadillac Eldorado and Lincoln Mark VIII have manufacturer's suggested retail prices that start at about $38,000, and the cost of admission keeps climbing from there.
All of which makes the Riviera an especially attractive choice. It may not have the cachet that goes with Mercedes-Benz, BMW or Lexus, but it certainly has an appealing presence all its own, as well as all the amenities that take motoring beyond the realm of mere transportation.
Our test car came equipped with a supercharged 3800 V6 in the Riviera's signature color, Platinum Beige, and had an MSRP of $31,743.
The American luxury-car tradition has never been afraid of generous dimensions, and in this sense the all new Riviera is thoroughly in touch with its heritage. It is bigger than either the Eldorado or Mark VIII - bigger, in fact, than any luxury coupe this side of a Bentley Continental R.
But other elements of the traditional American luxury car - sluggish handling, vague steering, indifferent braking performance - are conspicuous by their absence. The Riviera shares a number of chassis components with the Oldsmobile Aurora - a chassis that is probably the most rigid in GM history, with the possible exception of the Chevrolet Corvette.
Chassis stiffness - a new religion in the domestic industry - is the key to durability, noise isolation and good handling. Even though the Riviera has no sports-car pretenses, it's devoid of the undignified wallowing that afflicted the American luxoboats of yesteryear.
Aside from some very minor trim changes - a little less chrome - the Riviera is visually unchanged from its triumphant introductory year.
There is a significant change under the hood, however. The original base engine - GM's 3800 V6 - has been replaced with an extensively re-engineered 3800 Series II edition, and it's a brilliant piece of work. The 3800 Series II has the virtues of its predecessor - manufacturing simplicity, quiet operation - in a package that's more compact, lighter, more fuel efficient and more powerful: 205 hp versus 170 hp.
The Riviera's upgrade engine continues to be a supercharged version of the old 3800 V6, appropriately called the supercharged 3800 V6.
Besides the supercharged engine, different wheels and speed-rated tires, There is not much distinction between a basic Riviera and an uplevel version, nor are there any specific model designations.
All models do share one flaw: the Riviera's elongated tail, which is the only element of the exterior design that appears exaggerated. It provides plenty of trunk space, but getting to its innermost regions requires an awkward stretch.