4 WHEELS · Georgetown & Acton · October 13, 2011 One of the most welcome aspects of the 2011 Dodge Durango is the new generation of Chrysler interiors boasted the finest materials such as fine-grain Nappa leather in the Citadel model (shown). Durango has plenty of standard features Continued from pg. 1 While there is no doubt seven front linemen could travel in comfort, what the Durango does so well is provide amazingly large cargo and utility volumes. Behind the 50/50 third row folding seats is 0.49 cu m (17.2 cu ft). Drop the fold and tumble second row of seats and it becomes 2.39 cu m (84.5 cu ft). And if that is not enough, the front passenger seat also folds flat. If you want to tow, the Trailer Tow Group ($675) with the 3.6-litre allows up to 2,812 kg (6,200 lb). Opt for the Hemi and it goes up to 3,266 kg (7,200 lb). There aren't a lot of options but there is a lengthy list of standard features you can find more about at www.dodge.ca. Just a few of the included features on the Citadel are: SmartBeam HID headlights with auto levelling, eight-way power front passenger seat, heated and ventilated front seats, power sunroof and a great GPS/ navigation/30 gig hard drive and voice recognition and Bluetooth streaming audio infotainment system. The latter sounds like rocket science stuff but it's pretty intuitive. Also part of the Citadel trim level are two things you either love or hate. The first is Blind Spot Monitoring with See FULL, pg. 5