General Motors created the Geo brand in order to sell cars built in partnership with Suzuki, Isuzu and Toyota in the United States, and Geo-badged machinery was sold from the 1989 through 1997 model years. Today’s Junkyard Gem, found in a New Orleans self-service boneyard recently, is one of the very last Geos ever built.
There was always a close relationship between Geo and Chevrolet, which GM demonstrated by sneaking the Chevrolet bowtie into the Geo logo. The first three Geo-branded models began their careers with Chevrolet badging before getting Geo-ized for 1989. The Spectrum, twin to the Isuzu I-Mark, was a Chevrolet from 1985 through 1988. The 1985-1988 Chevrolet Sprint was a badge-engineered first-generation Suzuki Cultus, with its second-generation successor becoming the Geo Metro. The Prizm was a NUMMI-built Toyota Corolla Sprinter, which replaced the Sprinter-based 1985-1987 Chevrolet Nova. The Daewoo-built Pontiac LeMans never became a Geo, presumably because its ancestry was South Korean rather than Japanese.
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In 1989, Geo added the Storm (Isuzu Impulse), followed by the Tracker (Suzuki Sidekick) as a 1990 model. In December 1996, GM announced that the Geo brand would get the axe in the fall of 1997, with the Prizm, Tracker and Metro becoming Chevrolets.
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This car was built at CAMI Automotive in Canada in May 1997, making it one of the final handful of Geos assembled. The Chevrolet Metro stuck around through 2001.
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For its final model year, the Geo Metro was available with one of two trim levels: base and LSi. This car is an LSi three-door hatchback, which had an MSRP of $9,180 ($17,906 in 2024 Dollars). The base three-door hatchback for 1997 listed at $8,580, or $16,735 after inflation.
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The most important difference between the base and LSi versions was found under the hood. The base Metro got a 1.0-liter three-cylinder engine rated at 55 horsepower and 58 pound-feet, while the LSi got the 1.3-liter “big-block” four-cylinder with 70 horses and 74 pound-feet. I owned a ’96 Metro with the four-banger for a brief period, and it wasn’t quite intolerably slow.
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This car has the optional three-speed automatic, which added $595 ($1,161 today) to the price.
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It also has air conditioning and a Delco AM/FM radio, which were included as part of the $1,346 1SE option package ($2,625 in today’s money).
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It was thus a boring but serviceable commuter car that sipped gas and got its job done for 27 years and 113,610 miles.
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It’s swampy and humid in Gulf Coast Louisiana, and so this car is a petri dish of various species of mold and mildew.
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Parking can be tough in New Orleans, so a little Metro must have been convenient.
It’s a lot like a big fat car, but without the fat.