Cadillac adds size to Escalade with ESV

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The 2013 Cadillac Escalade ESV's V-8 engine yields 14 miles per gallon in the city and 18 on the highway. (MCT News Service)
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Conestoga wagons still trundle across Texas on 22-inch wheels, packed to their square corners with people and cherished possessions. Like suntan lotion and those chairs that come in bags and big blue Igloo coolers full of my son-in-law’s odd beer. And hot-dog buns and junk food, of course.

We were beach-bound in an SUV so big that the people way in back resided in a different ZIP code.

Well, maybe not. But the first time I stood next to the towering 2013 Cadillac Escalade ESV Platinum, I wondered if the air was cooler up there on top than it was at ground level with the Democrats.

And could you maybe hang-glide off that thing? Probably not.

But the old-school Escalade kind of straddles two recent automotive eras.

Restyled five years ago, when gas was $2.50 a gallon and hamburgers were half-pound slabs, the behemoth Escalade reflects the tail end of an era when everything American got bigger – houses, couch-potato kids, dogs, significant others.

Moreover, the ’Slade is built ’50s-style on a heavy ladder frame at the GM Assembly Plant in Arlington, Texas.

But the pearl-white ESV I had recently still looked pretty 21st-century brash and blingy with its unusual vertical headlamps, sharply creased fenders and over-the-top grille — elements you see in the Cadillac CTS and SRX.

We could call it conflicted, I suppose. But I came to view it as Texas Giant, the wildcatter’s enormous station wagon.

At first glance, almost nothing about the Escalade ESV makes much sense in this lean, less-is-less period we’re in now.

The ESV is the stretched “Suburban” edition of the Escalade, and it’s longer than a State of the Union speech.

Like all Cadillacs, mine wore an exaggerated silver chain-looking grille up front with a huge Caddy crest in the center.

The Escalade also still sports those cheesy fake vents on the front fenders that could have been plucked straight off the shelf at Pep Boys.

But its slab sides looked mighty right with the big vertical head- and taillamps, and the big 22-inch chrome wheels shod with 285/45 tires gave the beast proportion.

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