2030hrs Well, that just about wraps up autocar.co.uk's live blog from another rip-roaring Geneva motor show. Keep an eye on the website for the further updates from the event as they happen.
For most at the Geneva motor show this year, it was all about the energy and exuberance of very small cars.
Of course, we did have the first outing for McLaren's excellent 650S, plus the usual Lambo-Koenigsegg-Gumpert-Pagani set that express themselves best at Geneva because the show isn't 'owned' by anyone.
Ferrari also caught plenty of attention with the new California (styled, it seemed to me, to be unrecognisable as new unless the old one was standing by). And Maserati surprised with its beautiful Alfieri concept coupé, which just turned up on the day. The marque's UK connections knew 'something' was coming, but that was all.
No, the big stuff of Geneva 2014 was small, as it were. Toyota and PSA evidently enjoy their A-segment cooperative deal enough to want to continue the Aygo-C1-108 project with an all-new car.
What made that interesting (beside the fact that the cars have gained only height – they're shorter and no heavier) was that the Toyota looked by far the funkiest, evidently at the direction of Akio Toyoda.
Citroën could have been expected to take a lead on funk-factor but its designers were rather monopolised by the extra-quirky Cactus small people carrier, while Peugeot seemed to have an outbreak of formality with the 108 to echo the tasteful conservatism of the Peugeot 308, declared Car of the Year at the show.
The all-new Renault Twingo impressed with its cute neatness, although there was a feeling that some of the marque's recent design flair was being held in check by the fact that in a few months' time this car's main elements will also be revealed as a four-seater Smart. Renault tried dressing its cars with waistline decals, which sort of worked.
There was no such restraint at Mazda, which displayed its exceptionally swoopy Mazda 2 concept, itself very reminiscent of the 3, only smaller. Next door, it was great to see Honda make such an excellent job of the Type R concept, a show car that looked production-ready down to the last millimetre, which is often Honda's way.
Audi's all-new TT would have been much more impressive if you hadn't seen all the previous generations first, which is something you can also say about BMW's new Mk3 Mini in its first European outing, though both had impressive, adventurous and more usable interiors.
The Jeep Renegade, just four metres long and to be made in Italy by Italians (which only a year or two ago would have seemed incredible) was a bold, upright car but looked, well, ugly.
Perhaps Jeeps aren't supposed to be beautiful, but bigger Jeeps have acquired a Germanic gravitas that rather becomes them, whereas this seemed to have been left to the kids. Perhaps kids will buy it, which would be a result
The true tour de force of Geneva this year was a person: new PSA boss Carlos Tavares. In a series of interviews he briskly laid bare his company's mission with dazzling clarity and truthfulness.
The small cars of this year's Geneva certainly painted a different show picture than usual, but it is Tavares, over the years ahead, who is likely to make the biggest difference of all.
The Geneva motor show as it happened:


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Make up your mind Autocar.
"At 3.75m in length the new Aygo is just 25mm longer than the outgoing model, and its track is just 8mm wider."------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->>>
Quote Autocar:
"the fact that the cars have gained only height – they're shorter and no heavier"
Zenvo ST1
The only thing missing is Benny Hill.
The only conclusion I can draw is it's only boys who're interested in these types of shows.