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Get ready for GMSV … and Corvette

It’s all over for HSV … but, don’t worry, there’s a good reason.

 CONFIRMATION today that Holden Special Vehicles is going, GM Speciality Vehicles is taking over within a couple of months and from now on the push is with American Chevrolets, pick-ups and a certain two-seater sports car … to start with.

Nothing about the above will surprise: Talk about a re-emergence as GMSV traces back to comment aired during the General Motor’s announcement on February 17 about Holden heading for the grave.

The one twist in today’s announcement from the remnants of the soon-to-go Holden operation is that the guy who has developed GMSV for New Zealand and Australia won’t be holding the reins when this new enterprise springs into operation.

Peter Keley, a General Motors and Holden ‘lifer’ who in rising up through the ranks of the Lion Brand served a popular term from 2005 to 2008 as managing director of Holden New Zealand, has elected to leave the brand at the end of October.

The amiable and energetic Australian will work with Joanne Stogiannis, announced today as Director – GM Speciality Vehicles, to establish the GMSV dealer network in Australia and New Zealand in the lead-up to his departure.

She’s been Holden’s dealer development manager, with more than a decade of experience working with the lion brand.

GMSV establishes alongside GM’s existing business units in the region, Holden Aftersales and Isuzu New Zealand.  It is scheduled to commence operations in the fourth quarter of this year.

Full clarification on what this means for those dealers currently flying the HSV flag in is yet to be spelled out. Currently, HSV has 56 dealers in Australia and eight in New Zealand, all but two in the North Island. Does GMSV need that many outlets?

There’s also no word about what this means for any employees of HSV in New Zealand.

When this writer last spoke to Andrew Lamb, the specialist make’s New Zealand regional manager, it was on April 28.

 His comment was sought then on talk then that has also come to prove true now – that central to the future programme is a deal between GM and Walkinshaw Group, the powerhouse behind HSV, which dates back to 1988. 

As was speculated then is confirmed now. GMSV be a joint venture between Walkinshaw Group and GM and its task initially will be to continue exactly what HSV has been doing now; take North American-built, left-hand-drive GM product and convert it to right-hand drive in Melbourne.

Specifically, that’s just the Silverado. HSV ceased remanufacturing of the Camaro into right-hand drive in April. There’s no plan to restart this. 

Speculation about GMSV and what it meant for HSV rose at an interesting time for Kiwis as it was when dealers here were finally told that the Silverado 1500 pickup was coming here.

GMSV comment today is that this model will be core to ongoing operations, though the larger 2500 will also be expected to pull its weight.

However, it’s clear that if any one vehicle will pull punters in for tyre-kicking, it’s the world’s first factory right-hand-drive Corvette, whose availability in 2021 has been signalled. No more news than that, however.

And then? Well, there’s already conjecture GMSV will want to add in more metal to fill in some gaps. So, conceivably, the Chevrolet Tahoe and some Cadillac variants might also show.