Mexico City (AFP) - It was a symbol of the Mexico City
landscape, zooming, honking and fuming in the mega-capital's infamously
dense traffic. But the beloved Volkswagen Beetle is nearly extinct, a
victim of anti-pollution campaigns.
A few "vochos," as the curvy car is known in
Mexico, can still be spotted occasionally in the city's chaotic streets
while so-called "Vochomania" clubs of collectors try to keep it alive.
But
the once ubiquitous white and green -- and later red and gold -- Beetle
taxis that clogged boulevards are gone from the metropolis, home to 20
million people and four million cars.
"We could have thought about
keeping a few in the historic center to preserve the symbol. But it
wasn't meant to be," said Rodrigo Diaz, an urban planning consultant who
writes a blog on transport issues.
The unceremonious demise of the vocho is surprising for a country that has had a long love affair with the Beetle.
The "people's car" born in Germany in the politically charged 1930s arrived in Mexico in 1954, where it became an instant hit.
View gallery
The once ubiquitous white and green -- and later red and gold -- Beetle taxis that clogged boulevard …
Seen as affordable, easy to fix and a fun ride, Mexicans
scooped up 50,000 Beetles in just one year. It was quickly adopted by
taxi drivers and the Volkswagen was given the diminutive nickname,
vocho.
"In case of a breakdown, you could replace the fan belt with panty hose," recalled Ricardo, a nostalgic taxi driver.
The
car's success prompted Volkswagen to build a plant in the central state
of Puebla in 1964. By 1973, a third of cars sold in Mexico were vochos.
During
that era, the Beetle became the most produced single model car in
history with 15 million vehicles made, overtaking Ford's Model T.
Beetle fever spread across the region. In Brazil, where it was also built, people called it "Fusca."
View gallery
Beetle aficionados can still find a few Beetle taxis but they have to venture into tourist towns suc …
In Uruguay, former president Jose Mujica declared only one asset in 2010: His 1987 Beetle.
- Queen of Hollywood -
While
the bug was adored in Mexico, its charm won over Hollywood, where it
was immortalized as "Herbie" in a Disney film series about the Number 53
race car with a big heart.
In 1980, the production took the
Beetle to Mexico in "Herbie Goes Bananas," in which the intelligent car
faces off with a bull in an arena, dismantles a network of smugglers of
Aztec artifacts and accelerates like a Formula 1 race car.
The films contributed to the Beetle's worldwide popularity.
View gallery
The Beetle's demise came as passengers preferred newer, safer and more comfortable rides and the …
But after the era of the oil crisis, the Beetle began to lose
its charm. It was suddenly seen as too polluting, too noisy and too
uncomfortable.
Its backseat was too hard compared to newer
vehicles. The passenger seat was often removed by taxi drivers. When the
driver hit the brakes too hard, the passenger risked flying through the
windshield.
Worse, in the late 1990s, criminals turned the Beetle
into a trap for "express" kidnappings and robberies, transforming the
"Love Bug" into a villainous vocho.
"The two-door system kept you
blocked in the back of the vehicle," said Sofia, a Mexico City resident
who was the victim of one of these wild rides in 1994. "The driver would
let his accomplices get in and they would take your money."
- End of a myth -
View gallery
Some old Beetles can still be found on Mexican streets, such as this modified model in Buenavista de …
The Beetle taxis were repainted in white and green in an
attempt to refurbish their tarnished image. The colors were later
changed to red and gold.
But the new body paint was not enough as passengers preferred newer, safer and more comfortable rides.
The last vocho was built in 2003 in Puebla, at the world's last Beetle assembly plant.
Taxi
drivers were offered $1,000 to get rid of them. In 2012, there were
still 3,500 Beetle taxis, but they were gradually sent to junkyards.
The capital's taxis are now four-door vehicles with a rear trunk, like in most major world cities.
Beetle
aficionados can still find a few taxi-vochos but they have to venture
into tourist towns such as Taxco, where they are painted red, or
Acapulco, where they are white and blue.
"Unlike
London with its double-decker buses, San Francisco and Lisbon with
their cable cars, or Valparaiso with its funicular, Mexico didn't
declare this vehicle a part of its historic heritage," Diaz, the
blogger, lamented. "It's a shame."
At
least one white and green taxi can still be seen: in a museum in
Berlin. It was sent by Mexico City in 2008 as a gift, in a sort of
return-to-sender gesture after a 50-year love affair.