Honda CR-V celebrates 30th anniversary

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It seems ludicrous that Australia’s favourite new vehicle type – the mid-size SUV – is younger than any of the three Jonas Brothers or Hannah Montana star Miley Cyrus.

But the modern ‘soft-roader’ is a relatively new phenomenon, pioneered by Japanese automakers in the mid-1990s with a handful of crossover vehicles that blurred the lines between traditional small hatchbacks and family-focused station wagons.

Sure, there were high-riding four-wheel drive wagons before that, like the Ford Bronco, Jeep Cherokee, Mercedes G-Class and Toyota LandCruiser, but those were more rugged off-roaders.

The soft-roader revolution we know today really boomed after the arrival of cars like the Toyota RAV4, Subaru Forester and the Honda CR-V, which this month celebrates its 30 anniversary.

So, let’s take a drive down memory lane and see what’s changed – and what remains the same – with Honda’s most popular model of the 21 century.

1995 – First-generation Honda CR-V

Honda was one of the early pioneers of the mid-size SUV segment when it revealed the first CR-V in Japan in October 1995.

It was a landmark car for the brand that not only set the foundations for its SUV-centric lineup today, but also broke a few rules along the way – including busting out of the Japanese government’s compact car regulations which, subsequently, slapped domestic buyers with a more expensive annual road tax fee.