Prevost (bus manufacturer)
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Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Manufacturing |
Founded | 1924 |
Headquarters | Sainte-Claire, Quebec, Canada |
Key people | François Tremblay (president).[1] |
Products | Coaches RV (Conversion Shells) |
Parent | Volvo Buses (1995–present) |
Website | prevostcar |
Prevost (/ˈpreɪvoʊ/, French pronunciation: [pʁevo]), formally known as Prevost Car, is a Canadian manufacturer of touring coaches and bus shells for high-end motorhomes and specialty conversions. The company is a subsidiary of the Volvo Buses division of the Volvo Group.[2]
History
[edit]![]() | This History reads like a press release or a news article and may be largely based on routine coverage. (July 2021) |
Early years (1924–1951)
[edit]
Prevost Car was founded in 1924 by Eugène Prévost (1898–1965), a cabinet maker specializing in church pews and school furniture, who in 1924 was asked to build a custom bus body for a new REO truck chassis.[3]: 1924 Prévost's company received several repeat orders. Between 1937 and 1939, its first bus manufacturing plant was built.[3]: 1937 Initially the vehicles were built with metal panels over a wooden frame. In 1945 this changed, and body panels and frames were made of metal.[3]: 1945
In 1943, the company was awarded a large contract to build buses for the Defence Ministry of Canada.[3]: 1943 After the war, the company resumed commercial sales in 1948 as Les Ateliers Prévost, and established vertically integrated manufacturing facilities to handle metal production and bus fabrication;[3]: 1948 it was awarded another large contract for 100 motorcoaches from the government of Canada in 1951.[3]: 1951 At about the same time, Prevost was making city transit buses, including the Citadin.[4]
Normand era (1957–1995)
[edit]The company was acquired by Paul Normand in 1957, who renamed the company to Prevost Car.[3]: 1957 Prevost dealerships were opened in America and Canada starting in 1967.[3]: 1967 In 1969, two American businessmen, Thomas B. Harbison and William G. Campbell, formed a partnership with André Normand, then President of Prevost, to become the company's owners. These three men, in turn, sold Prevost to Volvo Bus Corporation and Henlys Group in 1995.[3]: 1969 [5]
Under the Normands, in 1961 Prevost Car introduced the Travelair, a 25-foot passenger coach for short trips, and the Panoramique, a 40-foot intercity coach which served Grey Goose Bus Lines.[3]: 1961 This was followed by the Champion (1966),[3]: 1967 which competed with the GM Buffalo bus. A transit bus version of the Panoramique was developed and sold with a dedicated body featuring a rear door, but this version was discontinued in 1968 when the company shifted to market exclusively motorcoaches.[6] An upgraded version of the Champion was introduced in 1968 with taller side windows, rounded at the top, and this model was renamed Le Prestige in 1973.[3]: 1968 For the motorhome market, Prevost began selling Champion conversion shells to upfitters starting in 1970.[3]: 1970
The Champion line was succeeded by the LeMirage in 1977,[3]: 1977 which also were sold as conversion shells starting in 1978.[3]: 1978 Le Prestige production stopped in 1981.[3]: 1968 After expanding the factory in 1980,[3]: 1980 wide-body versions, at the contemporary North American coach standard width of 102 in (2,600 mm), were introduced as the LeMirage XL and Prevost XL in 1984.[3]: 1984 A long-wheelbase variant of the LeMirage was introduced in 1992 with a nominal 45-foot length, the XL-45 Entertainer,[3]: 1992 and a similar premium touring coach was introduced in 1995, the LeMirage XL-45.[3]: 1995
One year after the XL buses debuted, in 1985, Prevost introduced the H5-60, an articulated bus, at the annual meeting of the American Bus Association; this was the first model in what would become the H-Series.[3]: 1985 Starting in 1989, Prevost added rigid body models, including the H3-40, H3-41, and H3-45.[3]: 1989
Volvo era (1996–present)
[edit]Volvo assumed sole ownership of Prevost in 2004.[3]: 2004
The LeMirage XL-II began production in January 2000.[3]: 2000 For 2006, the XL-II was revised to become the X3-45, which featured a longer wheelbase than its predecessor.[3]: 2006 Beginning in 2011, the Prevost X3-45 was made available in a transit-style configuration as a commuter coach. The New York City Transit Authority was the launch customer for this configuration. Previously, 20 transit-style buses of the Le Mirage predecessor model had been built for GO Transit in the late 1990s. In 2019, the X3-45 was redesigned, getting a new headlight setup and a new rear end. It continues to be available in intercity and transit configurations.
The H-Series was facelifted in 2004.[3]: 2004 The H-Series received a new sound system, plus GPS and destination sign options.[citation needed] For the 2024 Model Year, the H3-45 was redesigned with a new front end and interior facelift.
For the 2008 model year, Prevost introduced the Volvo D13 engine from their parent company as a replacement for the then-current Detroit Diesel Series 60 offering. The Volvo I-Shift semi-automatic transmission was introduced as an alternative to the Allison B500R transmission. A set of new interior color schemes was also introduced.
In 2009, Prevost became distributor of the Volvo 9700 coach in Canada and the United States.[3]: 2009
As of June 2019, Prevost operates 15 parts and service centers in North America, nine of them in the United States.[7]
Models
[edit]Current
[edit]Photo | Model | Production | Length(s) | Configuration(s) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() H3-45 (3rd Generation)
|
H-Series[8] [user-generated source] |
1985–present | Intercity Coach | Also available as a conversion shell. 46 H5-60s were completed.[9] | |
H3-40 (1989–1994) |
40-ft | ||||
H3-41 (1994–unknown) |
41-ft | ||||
H3-45 (1994–present) |
45-ft | ||||
H5-60 (1985–1992) |
60-ft (artic) | ||||
![]() X3-45 (2nd Generation)
|
X3-45 | 2005–present | 45 feet | Intercity Coach
Transit Coach |
2nd generation model introduced in 2019 Also available as a conversion shell |
![]() Volvo 9700 (North American Model)
|
Volvo 9700[10] [user-generated source] |
2009–present | Intercity Coach | Assembled in Mexico by Volvo |
Former
[edit]Photo | Model | Production | Length(s) | Configuration(s) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
LeMirage XL-II
|
LeMirage | 1976–2005 | 40- and 45-ft | Intercity coach | Replaced by X3-45[11] |
Champion | 1967–1981 | 40-foot | Intercity coach | 41 to 50 passengers | |
Marathon | ? | ? | Intercity coach | 47 to 53 passengers | |
Prestige | 1968–1981 | 40-foot | Sightseeing intercity coach | 41 to 50 passengers | |
Panoramique | 1960s | ? | Intercity coach | 41 to 49 passengers | |
V48-S | 1965–? | ? | Motorcoach | ||
50-PI-33 | ? | ? | Passenger coach | ||
19-S (Travelaire) | 1961–1967 | 19- and 25-ft | Transit bus | [6] | |
33-S | 1960s | ? | Passenger motorcoach | 33 to 37 passengers | |
Le Normand | 1957–1960 | ? | Intercity coach | ||
Prévocar | 1953 | ? | Intercity coach | ||
Skycruiser | 1948–1949 | ? | Motorcoach | ||
![]() Suburban intercity model
|
Citadin | 1948–1959 | 30- and 35-ft | Transit bus | 33 to 37 passengers; 96 in (2,400 mm) wide[4] |
Suburban | 1939 | ? | Motorcoach | ||
Motorbus | 1924 | ? | ? |

Ground Force One
[edit]Ground Force One is the nickname given to two heavily modified X3-45 VIP conversion coach owned by the United States Secret Service and used by the President of the United States and other high-ranking politicians or dignitaries.[12] Prevost built the coach as a conversion shell, the Hemphill Brothers Coach Company fitted out the interiors of the coach, and it is assumed that other features, like armor plating, were added by the Secret Service.[13]
Notes
[edit]- ^ https://prevostcar.com/stories/prevost-generations-innovation-presidents-perspective
- ^ "Prevost – Passenger coaches and bus shells manufacturer". Archived from the original on 2009-05-16. Retrieved 2009-03-03.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa "The Value of Heritage: Milestones". Prevost. Retrieved 26 March 2025.
- ^ a b Brophy, Jim (March 3, 2018). "Bus Stop Classics: 1948–1959 Prevost Citadin Urban Transit Coach: Canadian City Dweller". Curbside Classic. Retrieved 26 March 2025.
- ^ "Prevost – Passenger coaches and bus shells manufacturer". Archived from the original on 2007-09-20. Retrieved 2009-03-03.
- ^ a b Brophy, Jim (February 8, 2025). "Bus Stop Classics: Prevost Travel-Aire and S-Series Urban Transit Buses – A Couple of Rare Birds". Curbside Classic. Retrieved 26 March 2025.
- ^ Prevost Parts & Service Centers (accessed 20 June 2019)
- ^ "Prevost Car H-Series – CPTDB Wiki". cptdb.ca. Retrieved 2017-02-02.
- ^ Brophy, Jim (December 23, 2022). "Bus Stop Classic: Prevost H5-60 (1988–1992) — The Articulated Highway Coach, Take Three". Curbside Classic. Retrieved 26 March 2025.
- ^ "Volvo Buses 9700 – CPTDB Wiki". cptdb.ca. Retrieved 2017-02-02.
- ^ Brophy, Jim (March 19, 2023). "Bus Stop Classics: 1976–2006 Prevost Le Mirage — It's All In The Windows". Curbside Classic. Retrieved 26 March 2025.
- ^ CP (17 August 2011). "Obama's Made In Canada Bus, 'Ground Force One', Gets President Criticized". Retrieved 19 April 2018 – via Huff Post.
- ^ "Canucklehead Obama bus-ted! (PHOTOS)". nypost.com. 17 August 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2018.