Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

| 4 Dec 2025
Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

Long before the Renault Espace and its MPV imitators arrived to transform the way we transport a multitude of passengers, this quintet of cars stepped up to the challenge, seating six or more with panache, style and vast amounts of verve.

They all have greatly different appearances and hold different appeal, but each is versatile, well-planned and almost definitely more intriguing than your average people carrier.

When you consider the comparative uniformity of the people-hauling, new-car options buyers are faced with today, any of these seems a delightful, refreshing prospect.

Join us as we learn more about these now-classic, pioneering people carriers.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Morris Isis Traveller evokes a black-and-white era

The oldest vehicle here is the Morris Isis Traveller, which appears as if it has just rolled off the set of a black-and-white MGM-British comedy.

This was precisely the image Morris hoped to create for its largest estate: the ideal vehicle to transport up to eight people to the village gymkhana.

Its maker had launched the 1.5-litre Oxford II in 1954, followed by the 2.6-litre Isis a year later.

Compared with its stablemate, the ‘Greatest Morris… in Morris History’ – as the sales copy so modestly put it – had a longer bonnet to accommodate the six-cylinder C-series engine.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Morris Isis Traveller’s red leather trim avoids any pretence of ostentation

Autocar regarded the Isis as ‘modern, without a hint of ostentation’ – in other words it had no vulgar mid-Atlantic overtones.

The Isis Traveller, like the estate versions of the Oxford II and Minor Series II, featured a separately built ash-and-aluminium rear compartment.

The management at Cowley hoped the result would appeal to commercial travellers to use as an ad hoc office, as well as to social-climbing suburbanites who had dreams of becoming part of ‘The Country Set’.

At £957 7s 6d in 1955, the Isis cost more than a Standard Vanguard Estate, which offered the luxury of four side doors.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers
Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

Morris claimed the Isis Traveller had space for up to eight adults (left); ash and aluminium rear extension houses a third row of seats

Other rivals included coachbuilt adaptations of the Ford Zephyr Six or Vauxhall Velox, but none could match the Morris’ third row of seats.

There was, of course, the option of a Bedford CA UtilaBrake, but that was a converted van and therefore represented an entirely different prospect – and definitely not one for the social climbers, or even if you just wanted a respectable school-run car.

However, Isis sales were slow compared with its in-house British Motor Corporation rival, the Austin A90 Westminster, and production ended in 1958.

‘Our’ 1956 Clarendon Grey Traveller belongs to Morris experts Rosie and Sandy Hamilton, and is a vehicle that delights and beguiles.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Morris Isis Traveller’s 2639cc straight-six unit

The brochure proclaimed ‘ample room for arms and legs’, although drawings showed eight suspiciously diminutive occupants.

In reality, accessing the middle row of seats calls for a degree of agility, while the rear bench is not exactly built for comfort.

Morris promised the Isis Traveller could be ‘valuable in your business, and provide endless pleasure for your wife, the children and their friends’.

A more 21st-century way to summarise its virtues might be ‘dignity with practicality’, from its red leather upholstery to instruments that look as though BMC had sourced them from a Victorian steamship.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The diminutive Fiat 600 Multipla lives up to the multi-purpose billing as well as any car here

As a Series I, the Hamiltons’ Morris Traveller has a four-speed column change, while the car maker fitted the 1956 to ’58 Series II with a right-hand floor shifter of dubious merit.

Moving the lever into third and hearing the C-series engine lug, you can almost picture yourself as that pompous comedy anti-hero, en route to berate Leslie Phillips.

The next member of our group made its debut just a year after the Morris, but its design philosophy could not be more different.

It is always a pleasure to be reacquainted with an old automotive friend, never more so than when it’s Tommy Cerrone’s Fiat 600 Mulitpla.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Fiat 600 Multipla’s 767cc ‘four’ is no powerhouse

Fiat unveiled its ‘all service’ car, based on the 600 saloon, at the 1956 edition of the Brussels Salon.

The 600 Multipla was 10in longer than its parent model, and offered a choice of front and middle benches that could form a double bed, or a front bench combined with two rows of folding individual seats.

In addition, a taxi version with a division was made available, which became a ubiquitous and hard-working sight in cities across Italy.

By 1960, the Fiat Multipla had gained the 600D’s 767cc engine.

Production of the 600 Multipla ceased six years later when it was replaced by the 850 Familiare.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Fiat 600 Multipla’s driving position, located over the front axle, amplifies the sensation of speed

Tommy’s 1964 model is an incredibly rare right-hand-drive car, about which Fiat GB justifiably claimed: ‘No other vehicle in its class can offer such a variety of uses.’

Autocar thought the Fiat 600 Multipla ‘might become one of the family’. And in 1961 the model took on its most high-profile British role when Pimlico entrepreneur Tom Sylvester commissioned 25 Multipla minicabs, to incur the wrath of London’s black-cab drivers.

However, Fiat GB sold fewer than 100 Multiplas to British buyers, no doubt because it appeared far too unconventional for your average, rather conservative motorist.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers
Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Fiat 600 Multipla’s benches fold to form a double bed

In 1964, the price of a Fiat 600 Multipla in the UK was a pretty reasonable £653, but most drivers preferred to save £47 and opt for the safer and much more familiar waters of the Morris Minor Traveller.

Yet the few Britons who dared to be different and ordered the Fiat found it highly versatile.

Inside, the headroom is vast (it was drawn at a time when many Italians still wore hats), plus there’s 19cu ft of luggage space with the seats folded.

The steering column is universally jointed, but the front bench has no fore/aft adjustment; instead, the backrest moves to a limited choice of settings.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

This Saab 95 V4 stands out in Amber Yellow

Novice Fiat 600 Multipla drivers often find the seating position directly over the front axle as disconcerting as the headlight bowl by their kneecap and the spare wheel in front of the passenger.

But this characterful classic usually soon wins them over – not least because the Fiat feels as if it’s travelling at 200mph when the speedometer reads just 30.

Meanwhile, the rear compartment holds any number of friends, family members and pets.

In contrast, the Saab 95 was a much more familiar sight in the UK 50-odd years ago, although it was still not a car for the average driver in the world of The Likely Lads.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Saab 95 V4’s column-change gearshift works well

For one, the lines of the Saab 95 V4 appeared to hark from the 1950s.

It retained a now wildly unfashionable, column-mounted, four-speed gearchange, and at £1233 it was expensive compared with £1138 Vauxhall Viva or £1100 Ford Escort XL estates.

Yet neither of those British rivals offered the Saab’s air of quality, nor a third row of seats in the load bay.

Here we have Chris Boffey’s Amber Yellow 1972 95, which proudly and brilliantly stands out from the mainstream competition.

Saab introduced the original two-stroke 95 in May 1959, nine months before the 96 saloon.

The marque’s UK sales began in 1960, and in ’64 the range gained a dual-circuit braking system and ‘long-nose’ frontal treatment.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers
Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Saab 95 V4’s narrow, rear-facing bench is ideal for two children (left); room for seven – just

The Saab 95 and also the 96 V4, both powered by the 1.5-litre Ford Taunus engine, took a bow in 1966, with a new grille following for the ’69 model year – typifying its maker’s philosophy of gradual improvement.

One brochure warned the prospective buyer: ‘Don’t fall for body shape and colour alone. Fashion in body design leads many astray.’

The fundamental details of a 1972 Saab 95 are the same as those of a 1959 model, from the spoiler over the tailgate – to deflect air over the ’screen – to the deep footwell for the third row of seats.

As a new-car buy it might have been too different for some, but as a classic prospect, it delights with its details.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Saab’s Ford-sourced 1498cc V4 is applauded for its reliability and drives through a four-speed gearbox

Inside this classic Saab there is room for seven adults, well, provided they are close friends, while up front the driver can enjoy neat details such as side-window demister vents as well as a safety tag on the headlight switch to prevent them from being accidentally switched on.

Some owners complained about the pedals being offset to the centre, while there are others who might possibly regard the steering column lever with mild suspicion.

But if the former took some acclimatisation, the latter is so well executed as to make many an owner repudiate floor gearchanges. There were benefits to buying something a little different.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Citroën DS20 Break seats up to seven in hydropneumatically suspended comfort and head-turning style

A fully laden Saab 95 laughs in the face of hills, while its reliability endeared it to many custodians.

In the early ’70s, the drivers of some cars from British manufacturers were on first-name terms with AA or RAC patrols, but this striking Swedish contender could usually be relied upon to start first time. An important consideration for a hard-working daily.

Production of the Saab 95 came to an end in 1978; six years earlier, CAR magazine had referred to it as ‘Old fashioned but talented’.

However, marque enthusiasts, of which there are a great many, prefer the slogan: ‘Go swift, go safe, go Saab’.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Citroën DS20 Break’s packaging takes a ‘waste not want not’ approach and it is powered by a 1985cc ‘four’

Meanwhile, if you want to be discreet, do not travel by 1970 Citroën DS20 Break from Oxford to Peterborough – or anywhere, for that matter!

The reactions from members of the public range from amazement to the occasional: “What on earth is that?”

Or at least words to that effect – but Citroën DS owners tend to become immune to such responses.

The saga of the Citroën DS is not the most straightforward but, put simply, the estate version appeared in 1958, three years after the original saloon.

The car maker based the specification on the cheaper ID, and customers could choose up to eight seats with two folding chairs in the load bay.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Citroën DS20 Break’s column shift is easy to use

For 1967, a major facelift brought faired-in lights, and Citroën DS production was brought to an end eight years later.

The later dashboard also has an ominous-looking ‘Stop’ warning light straight from a B-movie spaceship.

Jamie Piggott of the DS Workshop owns ‘our’ Break, and a previous custodian fitted the 2.3-litre engine and five-speed manual gearbox from a 1972-’75 DS23.

Jamie tells us: “I prefer the four-speed semi-automatic because I think it’s the car’s quintessence.

“It is esoteric and idiosyncratic, those elements that make the Citroën so wonderful. But I don’t mind the five-on-the-column, which is easy to use.”

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

Transverse seating in the Citroën DS20 Break’s rear

Jamie finds the middle row of seats in the DS Break less comfortable than the saloon’s rear bench.

“It’s not as well-upholstered,” he considers, “but it’s big enough to lug a wardrobe.

“All of the DS family was created to transport you from Paris to Nice in an afternoon.” And in quite some style.

Citroën’s DS Break allows up to seven to enjoy the trip, with even occupants of the rearmost seats benefitting from the marque’s famous suspension.

And regardless of whether it’s a Break station wagon or a saloon, it is always, to quote essayist Roland Barthes, the car that ‘has fallen from the sky’.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

At more than 18ft long, the Buick Estate Wagon has a surplus of presence

The final classic car guest at our people-hauler party is even more remote from the British automotive landscape than the Fiat we looked at earlier – but in a totally different way.

If nothing else, it stands at more than 18ft long.

A fifth-generation 1978 Buick Estate Wagon, powered by a 6.6-litre ‘403’ V8, belongs less on the minor back-roads of East Anglia and more on the open highway, powering its way towards Lake Tahoe, taking an extended family to a weekend at the country club.

It is the sort of car that might be favoured by a genially corrupt lawyer in an episode of TV crime drama Columbo.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Buick Estate Wagon boasts super-comfy seats

The ‘woodie’ has a long tradition in American motoring history, but by 1953, Buick’s station wagons were of all-metal construction, apart from a vestigial panel on the tailgate.

All these decades later, the Estate Wagon’s exterior décor still projects a sense of the great outdoors – or at least wearing a chequered lumberjack shirt to the company’s summer picnic.

Buick introduced the Electra range in 1959 and launched the fifth-generation models for the ’77 model year.

The new line-up was 1000lb lighter than its predecessors, in response to the Fuel Crisis, while the Estate Wagon’s rear compartment was from the smaller Le Sabre.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers
Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

The Buick’s Oldsmobile-designed V8 makes for effortless overtaking (left); there’s easy access to the rear-facing bench seats

But, as we said earlier, it is in excess of 18ft long, so it is fair to say that Ross Mackenzie’s Buick feels substantial.

He bought it in January 2024 and, we must assume, is not short on storage space.

“I already owned a 1985 Limited sedan, but always wanted a station wagon,” he explains. “When I saw this online, I had to have it.”

Its bodywork is very well executed, including a multi-adjustable tailgate.

The standard car cost around $5000, but when equipped with cruise control, electric windows, a remote-control bootlid lock and other essentials to modern living, the price was nearer $9000.

General Motors aimed Buicks at corporate executives who needed to make the right impression.

Above all, the Estate Wagon encourages the owner to move the column selector to Drive and head for the horizon, ferrying eight full-sized people in a mobile living room.

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

This 185bhp Buick boasts the range’s largest engine

The super-light steering typifies the effortless driving experience, matched by super-comfy seats.

The accelerator pedal is enormous and the transmission silky-smooth.

“Because this car has the largest engine offered, it makes overtaking easy,” adds Ross.

No wonder Car & Driver called the Buick ‘an exceptional vehicle’.

Selecting a victor is impossible, because each car so entertainingly fulfils its brief: conveying a large number of people in great style.

If I opt for the Morris, it is simply because the Isis belongs in a world now only seen in films on Talking Pictures TV – and because it really does feel as stately as a galleon.

Images: Max Edleston

Thanks to: Jon Bentley; Jon Burgess; DS Workshop; Flying Club Conington


Factfiles

Classic & Sports Car – Citroën vs Morris vs Fiat vs Saab vs Buick: people-carrier pioneers

Morris Isis Traveller

  • Sold/number built 1955-’58/1850 (all S1 Travellers)
  • Construction steel unitary body, with rear compartment in ash and aluminium
  • Engine all-iron, ohv 2639cc straight-six, single SU carburettor
  • Max power 86bhp @ 4250rpm
  • Max torque 124lb ft @ 2000rpm
  • Transmission four-speed manual with overdrive on third and fourth, RWD
  • Suspension: front independent, by wishbones, torsion bars rear live axle, semi-elliptic leaf springs; telescopic dampers f/r
  • Steering cam and lever
  • Brakes drums
  • Length 14ft 8¾in (4489mm)
  • Width 5ft 5in (1651mm)
  • Height 5ft 3in (1600mm)
  • Wheelbase 8ft 11½in (2371mm)
  • Weight 3220lb (1460kg)
  • Mpg 21
  • 0-60mph 19.8 secs
  • Top speed 87mph
  • Price new £1125 (with overdrive)
  • Price now £5-10,000*

 

Fiat 600 Multipla

  • Sold/number built 1956-’66/240,000
  • Construction steel unitary
  • Engine all-iron, ohv 767cc ‘four’, single Weber carburettor
  • Max power 25bhp @ 4800rpm
  • Max torque 34lb ft @ 3000rpm
  • Transmission four-speed manual, RWD
  • Suspension independent, at front by double wishbones rear semi-trailing arms; coil springs, telescopic dampers f/r
  • Steering worm and roller
  • Brakes drums
  • Length 11ft 7in (3535mm)
  • Width 4ft 9in (1448mm)
  • Height 5ft 2in (1580mm)
  • Wheelbase 6ft 6¾in (2000mm)
  • Weight 737lb (1624kg)
  • Mpg 38
  • 0-60mph 43 secs
  • Top speed 65mph
  • Price new £653
  • Price now £25-50,000*

 

Saab 95 V4

  • Sold/number built 1966-’78/110,527 (all 95s)
  • Construction steel unitary
  • Engine all-iron, ohv 1498cc V4, single Autolite carburettor
  • Max power 65bhp @ 4600rpm
  • Max torque 85lb ft @ 2600rpm
  • Transmission four-speed manual, FWD
  • Suspension: front independent, by wishbones, telescopic dampers rear beam axle, trailing arms, lever-arm dampers; coil springs f/r
  • Steering rack and pinion
  • Brakes discs front, drums rear, with servo
  • Length 14ft 1in (4300mm)
  • Width 5ft 2½in (1580mm)
  • Height 4ft 10½in (1475mm)
  • Wheelbase 8ft 2in (2498mm)
  • Weight 2160lb (980kg)
  • Mpg 27
  • 0-60mph 14.2 secs
  • Top speed 90mph
  • Price new £1233
  • Price now £6-10,000*

 

Citroën DS20 Break

  • Sold/number built 1958-’73/1,455,746 (all DS versions)
  • Construction steel unitary
  • Engine iron-block, alloy-head, ohv 1985cc ‘four’, single twin-choke Weber or Zenith carburettor
  • Max power 103bhp @ 6000rpm
  • Max torque 106lb ft @ 4000rpm
  • Transmission five-speed manual or four-speed semi-automatic, FWD
  • Suspension independent, by leading and trailing arms, oleo-pneumatic struts, anti-roll bar f/r
  • Steering powered rack and pinion
  • Brakes powered discs front, drums rear
  • Length 16ft 6in (5030mm)
  • Width 5ft 11in (1800mm)
  • Height 5ft (1530mm)
  • Wheelbase 10ft 3in (3124mm)
  • Weight 3157lb (1432kg)
  • Mpg 22.3
  • 0-60mph 14.5 secs
  • Top speed 105mph
  • Price new £2098 (D Estate, 1973)
  • Price now £15-30,000*

 

Buick Estate Wagon

  • Sold/number built 1977-’79/25,964 (1978 Estate Wagons)
  • Construction steel unitary
  • Engine all-iron, ohv 6598cc V8, single Rochester four-barrel carburettor
  • Max power 185bhp @ 3600rpm
  • Max torque 320lb ft @ 2000rpm
  • Transmission three-speed automatic, RWD
  • Suspension: front independent, by wishbones, anti-roll bar rear live axle, four links; coil springs, telescopic dampers f/r
  • Steering power-assisted recirculating ball
  • Brakes discs front, drums rear, with servo
  • Length 18ft ½in (5504mm)
  • Width 6ft 8in (2030mm)
  • Height 4ft 8 ½in (1435mm)
  • Wheelbase 9ft 8in (2944mm)
  • Weight 4134lb (1875kg)
  • Mpg 17
  • 0-60mph 11.2 secs
  • Top speed 108mph
  • Price new $5000
  • Price now £10-15,000*

*Prices correct at date of original publication


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