1st Generation
(1983 - 1987)
Technical specifications, versions, and history for the Alfa Romeo Arna 3-door.
Select a generation to see available versions
(1983 - 1987)
In the late 1970s, the Italian manufacturer Alfa Romeo, which at the time operated under the control of the state conglomerate Istituto per la Ricostruzione Industriale (IRI), faced severe financial difficulties, constant labor crises, and severely impaired quality control. The brand urgently needed a hatchback model to compete in the highly competitive European C-segment, led by the Volkswagen Golf, Lancia Delta, and Ford Escort. Without the financial resources to design an entirely new platform, the board sought an international partner.
Simultaneously, the Japanese company Nissan sought strategic alternatives to bypass the severe import quotas applied by European countries to vehicles produced in Japan, primarily in the United Kingdom and France. Assembling cars on European territory would make the brand's commercial expansion on the continent viable.
From this mutual need, on October 9, 1980, Takashi Ishihara, president of Nissan, and Ettore Massacesi, president of Alfa Romeo, signed an agreement in Tokyo establishing Alfa Romeo Nissan Autoveicoli S.p.A. (Arna). To operationalize the project, a new industrial facility was built in Pratola Serra, in the Avellino region, located about 50 kilometers from the Alfasud plant in Pomigliano d'Arco, where the final integration of the mechanical assemblies took place. The agreement stipulated that Nissan would supply the stamped sheet metal and body panels of the Pulsar N12 model (sold in Europe as the Nissan Cherry), corresponding to 20% of the assembly work for each vehicle, while Italy would complete the vehicle with local powertrains and mechanical components.
The Arna project promised to unify Italian styling and driving dynamics with Japan's manufacturing precision and mechanical reliability. The practical result, however, inverted this logic: the vehicle combined Nissan's boxy and visually conservative bodywork with the well-known electrical problems and susceptibility to corrosion that plagued Alfa Romeo at the time.
From an engineering standpoint, joining the two platforms imposed serious technical barriers. Adapting the Alfasud's MacPherson strut independent front suspension and longitudinal four-cylinder boxer engine into the Japanese chassis — originally designed for transverse inline engines — required profound structural modifications to the front panels and engine bay. These challenges extended the development schedule, delaying the car's official presentation to September 1983 at the Frankfurt Motor Show.
Mechanically, the Arna inherited the five-speed transmission, steering system, front suspension, and front brake discs from the Alfasud. The independent trailing arm rear suspension, rear drum brakes, and instrument panel were supplied by Nissan. To harmonize the dynamic behavior between Alfa Romeo's firm front end and Nissan's softer rear end, the Italian engineers removed the front anti-roll bar and adjusted the camber angles. The model retained electrical systems of Italian origin, which perpetuated the reliability problems characteristic of the brand during that period.
The life cycle of the Alfa Romeo Arna extended from 1983 to 1987 in a single generation. Throughout this period, the manufacturer rejected applying aesthetic restylings to the bodywork, opting to direct investments toward mechanical and interior finish evolutions.
The vehicle reached the European market in late 1983 in the entry-level L (three-door) and SL (five-door) configurations, equipped with the 63-horsepower 1.2-liter boxer engine. In parallel, there was the temporary introduction of a version with a slightly sporty appeal, named the three-door TI, equipped with a 1.3-liter engine and 71 horsepower.
In 1984, the range was improved with the arrival of high-performance variants. The 1.3-liter TI version was updated with a new engine adopting two twin-choke Weber or Dell'Orto carburetors, raising power to 86 horsepower and allowing it to reach a top speed of 173 km/h. During the same period, the top-of-the-line 1.5-liter TI version was introduced, delivering 95 horsepower.
In November 1984, already as the 1985 lineup, Alfa Romeo implemented a series of technical and engineering improvements. The base 1.2-liter engine was updated by replacing the single-barrel carburetor with a vertical twin-choke Solex carburetor, which increased its power from 63 to 68 horsepower. Inside, the Arna received new upholstery materials and modifications to the dashboard graphics. The chassis and electrical system also evolved with the installation of new coil springs in the rear suspension and a revised 12V electrical system to mitigate chronic malfunctions.
In mid-1986, Alfa Romeo discontinued the TI versions, keeping in production only the basic 1.2-liter options and the 1.5-liter configuration until the assembly line closed in 1987.
The opposed four-cylinder boxer engines applied to the Arna represented the highlight of the package, ensuring agile acceleration and the characteristic roar of Italian sports cars.
Table 1: Alfa Romeo Arna Powertrain Specifications (1983–1987)
| Version / Model | Engine Code | Displacement | Configuration | Maximum Power | Maximum Torque | Fuel System | Top Speed | Acceleration (0 to 100 km/h) | Production Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.2 L / LS (63 PS) | AS 305 | 1,186 cc | Boxer H4 | 63 PS (46 kW) @ 6,000 rpm | 88 N·m @ 2,000 rpm | Single vertical carburetor | 155 km/h | N/A | 1983 – 1984 |
| 1.2 L / LS (68 PS) | AS 305 | 1,186 cc | Boxer H4 | 68 PS (50 kW) @ 6,000 rpm | 92 N·m @ 2,000 rpm | Twin-choke vertical Solex carburetor | 156 km/h | 14.1 s | 1984 – 1987 |
| 1.3 TI (71 PS) | AS 30006 | 1,351 cc | Boxer H4 | 71 PS (52 kW) @ 5,800 rpm | 107 N·m @ 3,000 rpm | Single vertical carburetor | 156 km/h | N/A | 1983 – 1984 |
| 1.3 TI (86 PS) | AS 31010 | 1,351 cc | Boxer H4 | 86 PS (63 kW) @ 5,800 rpm | 121 N·m @ 4,000 rpm | 2 Dell'Orto/Weber carburetors | 173 km/h | 11.2 s | 1984 – 1986 |
| 1.5 TI (95 PS) | AS 31016 | 1,490 cc | Boxer H4 | 95 PS (70 kW) @ 5,800 rpm | 133 N·m @ 4,000 rpm | 2 Twin-choke carburetors | 175 km/h | 10.6 s | 1984 – 1987 |
Table 2: Arna Dimensions, Capacities, and Chassis Specifications
| Measurement Parameter | Specified Value | Origin / Engineering Details |
|---|---|---|
| Overall Length | 4,000 mm | Identical to the body standard of the Nissan Pulsar N12 |
| Width | 1,621 mm or 1,651 mm | Minimum widening to accommodate the Italian front track |
| Height | 1,340 mm or 1,367 mm | Variable height depending on the suspension calibration of the L and TI versions |
| Wheelbase | 2,416 mm | Compact chassis with short overhangs |
| Curb Weight | 850 kg to 920 kg | Variation associated with the higher weight of the 1.5-liter engine and TI trim |
| Trunk Capacity | 250 liters | Space limited by the presence of the independent rear suspension |
| Fuel Tank | 50 liters (10 liters reserve) | Estimated average range of up to 800 kilometers in the entry-level version |
| Tires and Wheels | 165/70 R13 on 13" steel wheels | Stamped steel wheels with black plastic protective hubcaps |
| Front / Rear Brakes | 239 mm Discs / 203 mm Drums | Mixed system inherited from the union of the Alfa and Nissan platforms |
As part of the distribution agreements and circumvention of European customs barriers, the joint venture marketed the Arna under different identities and brands depending on the destination country. Additionally, the joint development extended to other automotive market segments.
Table 3: Global Variants and Parallel Projects of the Alfa-Nissan Agreement
| Commercial Designation | Associated Manufacturer | Target Markets | Differentiators and Technical Characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nissan Cherry Europe | Nissan | United Kingdom and Spain | Sold in Nissan dealerships; featured the Arna's taillights. |
| Nissan Pulsar Milano X1 | Nissan | Japan | Japanese production model that used the Alfa Romeo branding and green and black TI interior. |
| Holden Astra (LB/LC) | Holden (General Motors) | Australia | 5-door version; equipped with an Australian-produced 1.5 Nissan engine. |
| Romeo / Nissan Trade | Nissan / Alfa Romeo | Europe | Light commercial vehicle derived from the brands' industrial cooperation. |
In the British market, the marketing strategy generated great ambiguity. Initially, the vehicle was introduced as the Nissan Cherry Europe. This alienated traditional Nissan customers, who valued Japanese assembly quality and distrusted Italian labor, in addition to generating complaints from local dealerships due to the high rate of repairs required upon technical delivery. In 1985, Alfa Romeo took over direct importation, renaming the model the Arna, but sales remained low, as traditional Alfa Romeo buyers rejected the generically styled Japanese bodywork.
The commercial performance of the Alfa Romeo Arna fell far short of the brand's original projections. The industrial plan anticipated a constant production rate of approximately 60,000 units per year in the period from 1983 to 1987. However, over its four years on the market, the total produced reached only 53,047 units. The statistical archive data maintained by the Alfa Romeo Museum records a slightly higher total volume, calculating just over 58,000 assembled bodies, a number that encompasses the variants intended for direct export.
Table 4: Alfa Romeo Arna Annual Sales Volume
| Commercial Year | Units Sold | Scenario and Dynamics of the Period |
|---|---|---|
| 1983 | N/A | Launch in Frankfurt and timid start of distribution in Italy. |
| 1984 | 31,066 units | Year of greatest commercial success, corresponding to half of the projected annual target. |
| 1985 | 10,976 units | Drastic drop in sales resulting from strong internal competition with the 33 model. |
| 1986 | N/A | End of the TI versions; sales restricted to basic models in local markets. |
| 1987 | N/A | Definitive cancellation and end of production under orders from the Fiat Group. |
The commercial and financial downfall of the Arna was accelerated by two main factors:
In 1986, facing an unsustainable financial crisis, the Italian state-owned IRI put Alfa Romeo up for sale. The Fiat Group acquired the manufacturer and took direct control of it. One of the first strategic measures adopted by Fiat's new board was the definitive termination of the partnership with Nissan, closing the Arna assembly line in 1987 to concentrate all industrial and sales efforts on the Alfa 33.
The Alfa Romeo Arna is frequently cited by automotive industry historians as a clear example of inadequate planning in international cooperation agreements. The project failed by disregarding the strengths of each brand, joining a body without visual identity to a mechanic that was complex to maintain and prone to reliability failures.
This commercial failure imposed significant changes in direction for both companies. Nissan abandoned similar partnerships in Europe and opted to establish its own independent operations on the continent, opening in Sunderland, England, one of the most efficient factories in the European market. For Alfa Romeo, the episode accelerated the end of its state management and its definitive integration into the Fiat Group.
Over the years, the rapid oxidation of the steel sheets and the shortage of replacement parts caused the Arna fleet to disappear from European streets, making the vehicle an extreme rarity. In the United Kingdom, for example, where Jeremy Clarkson symbolically destroyed an example on national television in the year 2000, only three registered surviving vehicles remain. Today, the Arna is considered an exotic collector's vehicle and an important case study on the challenges of automotive globalization.