Feb 25, 2026

When you open the glovebox of a 2027 Chevy Bolt, you’ll find more than owner’s manuals and registration papers. Tucked neatly inside is something unexpected: a postcard. Yes, really. The new 2027 Chevrolet Bolt delivers what drivers expect from a modern EV — an EPA-estimated 262 miles of range on a full charge, more than 20 standard safety and driver assistance features, and an 11.3-inch diagonal infotainment screen. But it also delivers something you can’t measure in miles or megapixels: a personal thank-you from the people who built it.

A Work of Art from Kansas City

The postcard features artwork by Kansas City muralist Marianne Cascone. On the back are the signatures of leadership from GM Fairfax Assembly, the Kansas plant where every 2027 Bolt is built. It’s a small but powerful gesture — a direct connection between the people on the assembly line and the drivers who take the wheel. Cascone, a Kansas City native, has been drawing and painting since childhood. Though life initially led her down another path, she never let go of her art. Eventually, with her children older and her confidence growing, she made a bold decision: she quit her job to paint full time. That leap paid off. Her mural business boomed, and before long she was busy year-round. It was that rising reputation that caught the attention of leadership at Fairfax Assembly.

Celebrating the People Behind the Bolt

With the return of the Bolt, plant leaders wanted more than a production milestone. They wanted to celebrate the employees who bring the vehicle to life every day. Cascone toured the plant, studying every step of the manufacturing process — from stamping to final assembly. She took reference photos and worked closely with plant leadership to ensure the design reflected both the car and the people behind it. Once the concept was finalized, she used an innovative technique to scale it up. Using VR goggles, Cascone projected her sketch directly onto the plant wall — a first for her. In a tightly packed automotive plant where stepping back to view the whole wall isn’t easy, the technology made the difference. “I had to do everything two inches from my face,” she explained. Armed with paint, a scissor lift, and creative freedom to choose her own colors, she brought the mural to life in vibrant purples, blues, and pinks — hues bold enough to stand out in a busy manufacturing environment. “I wanted it to pop and be seen everywhere.”

From Factory Wall to Glovebox

Once the mural was complete, plant leadership realized it deserved a wider audience. So Cascone created a new artwork inspired by the plant mural — redesigned specifically for postcards included in every 2027 Bolt. For Chevrolet, bringing the Bolt back was about more than reviving a popular EV. The vehicle inspires deep loyalty and enthusiasm among customers. The postcard serves as a tangible thank-you to those drivers. Fairfax Assembly Plant Director Michael Youngs drew inspiration from his own childhood. His father was also a GM plant director and once did something similar to commemorate a vehicle launch. That memory sparked the idea to create something meaningful and community-driven for the 2027 Bolt. The message is simple: customers are at the heart of everything they do. Building these vehicles isn’t just a job — it’s part of who they are, and part of the Kansas communities they proudly represent.

“This Is From Us, to You”

For Cascone, seeing her work travel across the country — and potentially the world — is surreal. “You can go into stores and see murals all the time, but never think of the person behind them,” she said. “This is different. I got to sign my name on it.” Every postcard carries that signature. Every one tells a story. In an age of digital everything, there’s something refreshingly human about a printed postcard hidden in a glovebox. It doesn’t improve range. It doesn’t enhance performance. But it does something just as important — it reminds owners that their vehicle was built by real people, in a real community, who take pride in their work. So when a new Bolt owner opens that glovebox for the first time, they’re not just opening a compartment. They’re opening a connection.