The drastic drop in production of the Chrysler 300C (and consequently the station wagon) was not
motivated by inherent product flaws, but by the troubled divorce between Daimler and Chrysler in 2007, and
by the global economic devastation of 2008. Chrysler's bankruptcy in the United States resulted in its
rescue by Fiat, generating the Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) corporation.
The Italian management proceeded to substantially redesign the LX platform, creating the second
generation designated by the "LD" architecture for the 2011 model year onwards. The LD generation modernized
the front grille, adopted the new and advanced Pentastar 3.6-liter V6 gasoline engine family (replacing the
criticized 2.7 and 3.5), introduced a revamped interior far superior in materials, LED daytime running
lights, and refined suspension. The Hemi V8 had its displacement increased in the SRT versions to 6.4 liters
(392 cubic inches), reaching 485 hp in the final farewell edition of the 300C sedan in 2023.
However, the news for station wagon fans was fatal. The board concluded that converting the new LD
body panels for a wagon (and all safety approvals in crash-tests and aerodynamics for LHD and RHD) would
represent unjustifiable engineering costs in a world dominated by SUVs. Furthermore, the physical basis of
the wagon, the Dodge Magnum, had been summarily canceled and buried in 2008 due to low volume. Consequently,
the Touring configuration was extinguished forever, and Magna Steyr's Austrian lines ended production of the
300C in 2010.
The Lancia Thema Chapter (2011-2014)
For Europe, the FCA restructuring determined that the Chrysler and Lancia networks should not compete
or expend redundant funds. Thus, the new second-generation Chrysler 300 was subjected to profound badge
engineering (brand substitution). In all markets of Continental Europe, except the UK and Ireland, the
Canadian sedan manufactured in Brampton, Ontario, began to bear the classic Italian insignia and was
baptized as the Lancia Thema.
Lancia, a brand renowned for sportiness and tactile sophistication in the 80s and 90s (including the
notorious original Thema Type 834 manufactured between 1984 and 1994, which even featured an acclaimed
station wagon signed by the Pininfarina studio), tried to inject transcontinental refinement into the robust
American block. The exterior received subtle Italian polishes on the front grille and in the luxurious
porous wood interior (offered in Gold and Platinum versions). Mechanically, the Thema abandoned the old
German 3.0 V6 CRD and embraced the brand-new 3.0 V6 turbodiesel developed locally in Italy by VM Motori (in
190 hp and 239 hp variants), alongside a powerful 286 hp 3.6 V6 gasoline engine mated to the excellent ZF
8-speed automatic gearbox.
However, when attempting to revive the mystique of the nostalgic Pininfarina Thema station
wagon/estate and faced with the fact that the current 300 platform (LD) had abolished the station wagon
variant, the Thema operation found no resonance. European executive car clients considered the fractured
identity between Detroit roots, the disappearance of the old Austrian wagon's L-shaped trunk, and a Lancia
shield on the hood far too artificial. The modest goal of selling between 10,000 and 15,000 units annually
never materialized, prompting the quiet withdrawal of the Thema from European showrooms in 2014. The
American model, as a pure rear-wheel-drive sedan, fought behind the scenes in local fleets until the
definitive and celebratory shutdown of the entire 300 line at the end of the 2023 calendar year.