Auf wiedersehen, Kombi

Volkswagen enthusiasts Martin van Raalte (67, left) and Ken Berry (72) in Dunedin yesterday....
Volkswagen enthusiasts Martin van Raalte (67, left) and Ken Berry (72) in Dunedin yesterday. Photo by Peter McIntosh.
It's the end of the road for an automotive superstar.

The production of the Volkswagen Kombi will stop at the end of next year because of new safety legislation being introduced in Brazil, the only country in which it is still produced.

Volkswagen-trained mechanic Ken Berry, from Mornington, said the new legislation would require the installation of anti-lock brakes and front airbags.

The safety features would require major structural changes so keeping the design of the original Kombi would not be possible, he said.

Kombis were built in Germany from 1949 to 1979, but production had since continued in Brazil, he said.

Mr van Raalte and wife Hazel settle down for lunch in their Kombi van while touring Europe in the...
Mr van Raalte and wife Hazel settle down for lunch in their Kombi van while touring Europe in the 1970s.
Mr Berry had been working on VWs since 1955, and in the '50s and '60s every major firm in Dunedin had a Volkswagen van, he said.

He had owned six Kombi vans, he said.

The versatile space in the back made the van the choice of hippies, campers and tradesmen, he said.

The two rows of seats in the back could be taken out for a work vehicle, or it could become a camper with a pop-top roof, cooker and beds, he said.

"It's all a bit cramped, of course. You've got to know the people you're camping with."

The Kombi transported many New Zealanders living in London around Europe, he said.

• Do you have a Kombi travel story? Send it to odt.features@odt.co.nz

- shawn.mcavinue@odt.co.nz

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