Slate Auto bets on the minimalist electric truck
Would you trade modern automotive luxury for a utility-focused, sub-compact electric pickup? Slate Auto, a startup born from Jeff Bezos-backed Re:Build Manufacturing, is testing that hypothesis with a stripped-down vehicle that cuts the footprint of a traditional American truck by two-thirds while targeting a sub-$25,000 price point.
The company emerged from a secretive internal project known as Re:Car, prioritizing a radical, barebones engineering philosophy over the feature-heavy design language common in today's EV market. By stripping away complex electronics and oversized chassis components, Slate aims to lower manufacturing barriers and pass those savings directly to the consumer.
Despite the extreme simplification, the truck offers a modular path to ownership. Buyers can customize their vehicles using an array of 3D-printed accessories and colored wraps, allowing for a personalized aesthetic without the overhead of bespoke factory assembly. While the project has already secured interest from major investors, the core challenge remains whether American drivers—long accustomed to the scale and comfort of traditional pickups—will embrace a vehicle that prioritizes utility and affordability over size and standard creature comforts.
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