| Toyota Gaia | | | | Toyota Picnic |
| Production | | | | Toyota SportsVan |
| | | | Toyota Ipsum |
| Successor | | | | Toyota Premio |
| Toyota Isis | | | | The Toyota Gaia is a Japanese market MPV that |
| Class | | | | competes with the Nissan Prairie and the Honda |
| Compact MPV | | | | Shuttle. It was replaced by the Toyota Isis. The Gaia |
| Layout | | | | shares a platform with the Toyota Ipsum (sister car) |
| FF layout | | | | and Toyota Corona Premio (platform sharing). It was |
| F4 layout | | | | manufactured from May 1998 until September 2004 |
| Engine(s) | | | | for the Japanese market. |
| 2.0 L DOHC 3S-FE I4 | | | | April 2001 saw DVD based navigation added as an |
| 2.0 L DOHC 1AZ-FSE I4 | | | | option, and the 3S-FE engine was upgraded to the |
| 2.2 L SOHC 3C-TE turbodiesel I4 | | | | 1AZ-FSE with AWD. The 1AZ-FSE features Toyota's |
| Transmission(s) | | | | D-4 direct injection system. |
| 4-speed automatic | | | | The vehicle was named for Gaia (pronounced /e./ or |
| Length | | | | a./; "land" or "earth", from the Ancient Greek ; also Ga |
| 4,620 mm (181.9 in) | | | | or Gea (Modern Greek ) is the primal Greek goddess |
| Width | | | | personifying the Earth. |
| 1,695 mm (66.7 in) | | | | Gaia is a primordial and chthonic deity in the Ancient |
| Height | | | | Greek pantheon and considered a Mother Goddess or |
| 1,640 mm (64.6 in) | | | | Great Goddess. |
| Curb weight | | | | Her equivalent in the Roman pantheon was Terra. |
| 1,250 kg (2,755.8 lb) | | | | References |
| Related | | | | ^ The spelling Gea is not normally used in modern |
| Toyota Avensis Verso | | | | English. |