1968 Citroën ID21 DS Safari
Revolutionary French engineering met practical family needs in this otherworldly station wagon from Citroën’s groundbreaking DS family.
The ID21 Safari represented a more simplified version of the famous DS, sharing the same dramatic bodywork but featuring manual steering and conventional brakes rather than the fully power-assisted systems of the DS.
Built on a longer wheelbase than the sedan, the Safari featured a 2,175cc inline-four engine driving the front wheels through a four-speed manual transmission.
The 1968 model year brought Robert Opron’s major facelift, most notably a streamlined headlight design. However, American versions received four fixed headlights instead of the European swiveling units that turned with the steering wheel (source).
Practical family features included a roof rack, split tailgate, and two inward-facing jump seats located under the load floor. The Safari’s hydropneumatic suspension system provided the same legendary ride quality that made the DS series famous for floating over road imperfections.
Source