Cross-breeds are all the rage in the dog world right now. There’s the cockapoo, springador, puggle and labsky; the morkie, chiweenie and whoodle. The idea of these “designer dogs” is you get a kind of genetic Goldilocks breed, with the best characteristics from both parents: the loving loyalty of a retriever, for example, with the fluffy coat of a poodle.
And maybe what’s true in nature is also true in automotive engineering? It looks that way, judging by this car: This is the Charge ’67—and no, it’s not a restored classic with a V8 under the hood. It’s a brand-new EV, reimagined from the ground up as a purpose-built electric car.
Made in the UK, the ’67 is a mixture of two very different gene pools: It has the classic looks of the 1967 Ford Mustang Fastback, the car that Steve McQueen drove in his cult cop movie Bullitt; but under the skin it uses the hardware and software of EV start-up Arrival, which wants to revolutionize the world of commercial vehicles with its electric buses and delivery vans.
A Steve McQueen Mustang crossed with an electric van? This unlikely crossbreed dates back to 2015, when Arrival was founded in London by tech entrepreneur Denis Sverdlov. Sverdlov had a classic Ferrari Dino at the time, which was always leaking oil and breaking down. So he decided to create a new spinoff company that could apply his own, modular EV hardware to unreliable classics, like his Dino.
Charge Cars was founded in 2016, and Sverdlov then brought in Vadim Shagaleev—who’d previously run a video-on-demand business—to head up his new venture. Starting from scratch with a handful of Arrival engineers, Shagaleev’s first choice of prototype was his own favourite classic, the Mustang. But after buying an original 1967 car and considering an electric conversion (i.e., pulling out the existing drivetrain and installing a battery and motor), he realized this approach just wasn’t going to meet his and Sverdlov’s expectations. Old cars are, well … just old, and his classic Mustang was heavy, clunky, and full of rust.


