VW to offer a new car slightly larger than Chattanooga-made Passat

FRANKFURT, Germany - Volkswagen is coming out with a new model that will add to its offerings of larger cars in the United States, where its market share has lagged the competition.

The German company released a sketch Monday of the Arteon, a four-door with a sloping roofline. It is to be unveiled at the Geneva auto show in March, and go on sale in the summer of 2017. It should appear in the United States in 2018.

The upper midsize car occupies a position just above the slightly smaller Passat sedan made in Chattanooga, but the new model will be made in Germany.

Volkswagen brand head Herbert Diess said last week the company will focus on bigger cars and SUVs in the U.S. as it tries to overcome a scandal over cars it had equipped to cheat on diesel emissions tests. A new large SUV, the Atlas, is also on the way, built at the Chattanooga assembly plant. Diess conceded the company hasn't always been quick enough to meet shifting market trends in the US.

This year, Volkswagen-badged cars have claimed only 1.8 percent of the U.S. market through October, badly lagging competitors such as General Motors, Ford, Fiat Chrysler and Toyota.

The company said the Arteon will combine expressive design with practicality, in the form of a large trunk with plenty of carrying space. A news release had no details about price, engine types or technical specifications ahead of the Geneva show, but the company indicated there will be both diesel and gasoline-powered four-cylinder versions.

Tobias Suehlmann, Volkswagen's exterior designer, was quoted in the news release as saying the vehicle first "arouses enthusiasm through its expressive design" and then "surprises through its practical virtues."

Production will be at the company's plant in Emden, in north Germany.

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