Bowling Green Assembly Plant

The Bowling Green Assembly Plant is a General Motors automobile factory in Bowling Green, Kentucky. It is a specialized plant assembling GM's Y-body sports cars, the Chevrolet Corvette and formerly the Cadillac XLR.

History

The first 300 Corvettes were hand built at a plant in Flint, Michigan in 1953. Production was moved the next year to a facility in St. Louis, Missouri and then finally ended up in 1981 at the Bowling Green Assembly Plant. General Motors opened the Bowling Green plant for production on June 1 that year, with most of the 900 Corvette workers from St. Louis transferring to the new plant. What was once an abandoned Chrysler air-conditioning unit factory is now a one million square foot facility that employs almost one thousand people. Guided tours of the plant are available throughout the year on weekdays, three times a day.[1]

Investments

Many large investments have been made to keep the plant as updated and cutting edge as possible. As the Corvette improves throughout the years, the technology to create it has to be revamped as well.

2014/2013 $3.5 million for the relocation of the Performance Build Center to Bowling Green
2013/2012 $131 million for the plant remodel to make way for the C7 changeover, with $52 million for the Body Shop
2007 $4.5 million for conveyor addition and remodel
2005 $12 million for ELPO paint system
2005 $5 million in ANDON global error proofing
2005/2004 $19 million for C6 model changeover
2005/2004 $3 million for paint sludge system/ air balancing
1996 When production of the C4 Corvette ended in 1996, the plant was gutted and rebuilt to prepare for the more modern C5 Corvette.

Performance Build Center

The performance build center allows engine aficionados to build their own specialty engines. With the relocation of the performance build center from Michigan to Bowling Green, it allows customers to be able to build and watch the production of their car all in now one location. The opening of this center in Bowling Green is adding 20 new or relocated jobs to the community as well.

The center is the source of all the hand assembled dry sump engines. These would be the 6.2L LS3 V8 engine of the grand sport coupe (manual transmission only), the 7.0L LS7 V8 Z06 engine, and the 6.2L supercharged LS9 engine for the ZR1.[2]

Body shop

The new body shop now allows the aluminum frame to be produced in-house. The new shop also was designed to have the advancements to make the most complex frame design in Corvette's history. This new frame is 99 pounds lighter and 40% stiffer than the C6 frame.[3] With the chassis being so strong, the C7 convertible will not need any additional structural reinforcements to the frame which is very rare.

Community involvement

Features a wildlife habitat that is spread across 75 acres. The space also features a 42,000 pounds of ground-up ergonomic mats recycled from the plant for a picnic area. The land also features sunflowers that were planted by students and blue bird boxes that were made and installed by a local boy scout troop. The plant employs an environmental team that chooses appropriate plant species for the grounds.[4]

See also

External links

Coordinates: 37°0′41.02″N 86°21′59.81″W / 37.0113944°N 86.3666139°W / 37.0113944; -86.3666139

References

  1. "Bowling Green". GM News. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  2. "GM Relocating Performance Build Center to Bowling Green". GM News. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  3. Mceachern, Sam. "General Motors Re-Opens Overhauled Bowling Green Assembly Plant To The Public". GM Authority. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  4. "Experience Corvette As Never Before". Chevrolet. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.