Difference between revisions of "Flint East"

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'''GM Colmotores''' is a car company based in [[Bogotá]], [[Colombia]]. Established in 1957, they began manufacturing, under license, British Austins. In 1965, [[Chrysler Corporation]] took a 60% stake in the company, which manufactured Chrysler cars under license until 1979. In 1979, [[General Motors]] took control of the company, purchasing a 77.4% stake. In 1981, the company was renamed GM Colmotores. Since then it has manufactured, under license, a variety of [[General Motors]], [[GM Daewoo]], [[Isuzu]], and [[Suzuki]] vehicles for the local market, all sold under the [[Chevrolet]] name. The company has production facilities in Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela, and imports models from Korea built by GM Daewoo.
'''Flint East''' is an [[automobile]] component production complex owned by [[Delphi Corporation]] in [[Flint, Michigan]]. The complex, parts of which are about 100 years old, is located on [[M-54 (Michigan highway)|Dort Highway]], stretching along Robert T. Longway Boulevard past Center Road. The plant has produced numerous automotive components, including [[dashboard|instrument panels]], instrument clusters, [[spark plugs]], filters, air meters, fuel pumps and other electronic parts. Flint East once employed nearly 14,000 people, but as of 2007, was down to about 1,100 hourly workers.<ref name="freep.com">{{cite web|title=Family to return to Flint East|url=http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070622/BUSINESS01/706220336/1014|work=[[Detroit Free Press]]|accessdate=June 22|accessyear=2007}}</ref>


==GM Colmotores models==
Delphi's Flint Technical Center is also located on the site. In March 2007, it was announced that the company's technical centers, including Flint, would be consolidated to a single facility in [[Auburn Hills, Michigan]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Engineering center at Delphi East to close, jobs moving to Auburn Hills|url=http://blog.mlive.com/flintjournal/newsnow/2007/03/engineering_center_at_delphi_e.html|work=[[Flint Journal]]|accessdate=April 17|accessyear=2007}}</ref>


*[[Chevrolet Astra]] (built in Venezuela)
Hourly workers at the plant are represented by UAW Local 651.
*[[Chevrolet Aveo]] (built in Venezuela)
*[[Suzuki Carry|Chevrolet Super Carry]] (built in Colombia)
*[[Chevrolet Corsa]] (built in Colombia)
*[[Chevrolet Epica]] (built in Korea)
*[[Suzuki Vitara|Chevrolet Grand Vitara]] (built in Ecuador; based on 2nd-generation [[Suzuki Vitara]])
*[[Suzuki Jimny|Chevrolet Jimny]] (built in Colombia)
*[[Chevrolet Optra]] (built in Colombia)
*[[Chevrolet Spark]] (built in Korea)
*[[Suzuki Vitara|Chevrolet Vitara]] (built in Ecuador; based on first-generation [[Suzuki Vitara]])
*Chevrolet Luv Dmax (built in Ecuador; based on [[Isuzu D-Max]])


==Links==
==History==
* http://www.chevrolet.com.co - Official website
After losing control of Champion Ignition Company, Albert Champion founded the AC Spark Plug Company in 1908 in a [[Buick]] building in Flint, Michigan. It was purchased by [[General Motors Corporation]] in 1909 to supply the growing automobile company, and AC Spark Plug moved a few years later to a factory at Harriet Street and Industrial Avenue.
* http://www.chevrolet.com.ec - GM Ecuador website
 
* http://www.chevrolet.com.ve - GM Venezuela website
The [[Dort (automobile)|Dort Motor Car Company]] began building automobiles on the east side of the city in 1915, in a factory that would later be part of Flint East. In 1924, an economic downturn weakened the company and J. Dallas Dort's health began to fail, and the company folded and the complex was sold to AC Spark Plug in 1925.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://forums.detnews.com/joyrides/story/index.cfm?id=84|title=Sloan Museum traces Flint's rich automotive history|work=[[The Detroit News]]|accessdate=April 17|accessyear=2007}}</ref>
 
AC Spark Plug continued operations in both the Harriet Street and Dort Highway facilities until 1975, when the Harriet Street plant was closed and razed. In 1987, AC took over the former Chevrolet facilities on Chevrolet Avenue in Flint, naming that complex Flint West, and the Dort Highway facility became Flint East. The following year, AC Spark Plug and Rochester Products Division merged, becoming AC Rochester. For a time, the division's headquarters remained at Flint East, but soon moved to the Great Lakes Tech Center on the old Fisher #1 site.
 
Further consolidation among GM's divisions led to the division being renamed AC Delco Systems in 1994, and in 1995, the entire Automotive Components Group became Delphi Automotive Systems.<ref>{{cite web|title=GM Corporate History|url=http://www.gm.com/company/corp_info/history/gmhis1900.html|accessdate=April 17|accessyear=2007}}</ref>
 
In 1998, fearing a strike over a $200 million investment that had not materialized, GM began to pull critical dies from the Flint Metal Fab plant on the other side of town, to be shipped to another plant. The [[United Auto Workers|UAW]] workers at the plant immediately went on strike to protest the move. Mostly in response to this, but also because of fears that their own work would be moved elsewhere, workers at Flint East went on strike a week later on June 11. Since Flint East was the sole source of some parts for almost the entire company, within two weeks, virtually all of General Motors was shut down. On July 28th, GM agreed to the investment to Flint Metal Fab and to keep Flint East open until at least 2000. The union agreed to cooperate on efforts to increase productivity at both plants.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.univ-evry.fr/labos/gerpisa/actes/30/30-8.pdf|format=PDF|title=The 1998 Flint-GM strike - Bellwether of continental integration and lean production|work=Babson, Steve|accessdate=April 17|accessyear=2007}}</ref> The strike cost GM an estimated US$2.8 billion.<ref name="freep.com"/>
 
Shortly after the strike, it was announced that Delphi would be spun off in 1999 into what is now [[Delphi Corporation]], and Flint East was for a time part of Delphi's Energy and Engine Management Systems division. In 2002, ongoing financial problems caused the plant to be placed in the Automotive Holdings Group, a collection of underperforming plants that Delphi felt needed to be fixed, sold, or closed. Delphi declared bankruptcy in October 2005, and announced plans to close or sell 21 of its 29 US plants by Jan 1, 2008, including Flint East. Spark plug production, already greatly reduced, ended in early 2006.
 
Under an agreement reached by Delphi, General Motors, and the UAW in June 2007, Flint East and two other plants would remain open, but operated by GM or a third party designated by GM. Four other UAW-represented plants would be kept by Delphi, four sold, and at least ten others closed under the agreement.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070624/BUSINESS01/706240581/1002|title=Delphi workers get choices|work=[[Detroit Free Press]]|accessdate=June 24|accessyear=2007}}</ref>
 
===Flint Faience Tile===
In 1921, Champion founded the Flint Faience Tile Company in a building adjacent to the Harriet Street factory, firing decorative tiles in the same kilns as spark plugs. This was done so they could avoid shutting down the kilns when they were finished with spark plug production, because repeated cycles of cooling and reheating would damage the kilns. When AC expanded its operations to the former Dort Motor complex, Flint Faience moved to a new building there. The northwest portion of the plant still has these tiles along the outside, visible from Dort Highway and Davison Road. In 1933, General Motors closed the tile operation because of increased demand on the kilns for spark plugs. <ref>{{cite web|url=http://blog.mlive.com/flintjournal/newsnow/2007/08/faience_tile_to_be_auctioned_f.html|title=Faience Tile to be auctioned for United Way|work=[[The Flint Journal]]|accessdate=August 1|accessyear=2007}}</ref>
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
 
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[[Category:Companies established in 1956]]
[[Category:Motor vehicle assembly plants in Colombia]]
[[Category:General Motors factories]]
[[Category:General Motors factories]]
 
[[Category:Economy of Flint, Michigan]]
{{Modern-auto-stub}}
[[Category:Motor vehicle assembly plants in Michigan]]
[[Category:Buildings and structures in Flint, Michigan]]
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