Jump to content
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia

Holden Fishermans Bend Plant

Industrial park opened in 1936
Fishermans Bend Assembly Plant
Map
Built1936
LocationFishermans Bend, Melbourne
Coordinates37°49′29′′S 144°55′18′′E / 37.824770°S 144.921560°E / -37.824770; 144.921560
IndustryMotor vehicle and driveline component assembly
Products
Employees350 (2014)
ArchitectEric Gibson
StyleArt Deco
Area50 acres (20 ha)
Address171-197 Salmon Street, Fishermans Bend, Victoria
Defunct2020

The Holden Fishermans Bend Plant[1] was an industrial park opened in 1936 in Fishermans Bend, Victoria, as Holden's headquarters.[1] [2] The new location was opened due to many issues with its previous City Road facility.[3] The park was also intended to kickstart a Victorian leg of the General Motors subsidiaries Chevrolet and Vauxhall.

In 1948, the plant facilitated the production of the first Holden-branded motor vehicle, the Holden 48-215.[4] In 1956, due to an inability to meet demand, the assembly section of the plant was closed, succeeded by the new Dandenong plant. The Fishermans Bend plant also produced engines and driveline components for all domestic and most exported vehicles up until 2016, when the Australian LFX V6 was discontinued. In 1981, production started of the global Family II engine series - most of which were produced for export to other GM plants around the world.

Since 2020, the area is no longer used by Holden for manufacturing or administration.[5] In 2021, it was announced that the University of Melbourne planned to redevelop the area as the headquarters of its school of engineering, with plans to open in 2024.[6]

Products

[edit ]

After production of the Commodore VL engines ceased, the engine division became known as 'Holden Engine Company' (Aka. HEC)

Pre-Holden

Vehicles

Engines

Transmissions

Differentials

Notes

[edit ]
1.^ The facility was alternatively named the General Motors Holden Port Melbourne plant

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ "From the Archives, 1936: GMH opens new plant at Fisherman's Bend". The Age . 2021年11月03日. Retrieved 2022年08月03日.
  2. ^ "When General Motors Holden moved to Fishermans Bend - Port Places". 2022年02月18日. Retrieved 2022年08月03日.
  3. ^ Njuguna, Marcus (2021年12月08日). "The Rise And Fall Of The Holden Car Company". HotCars. Retrieved 2022年08月03日.
  4. ^ "Birth and demise of Holden at Fishermans Bend" . Retrieved 2022年08月03日.
  5. ^ "Holden Retiree's Club - Fishermens Bend". HRC.
  6. ^ "Almost 200ドルM to be spent transforming historic 32-hectare Melbourne site". 7News . 2021年05月17日. Retrieved 2022年08月03日.
United States
Current
Former
Other locations
Current
Former
A subsidiary of General Motors (1931–2020)
Final models
Cars
Pickup trucks
SUVs/Crossovers
Historic models
Divisions and subsidiaries
Engines
Founders
Other
Faculties
and schools
Colleges
Halls of residence
People
Buildings and
other facilities
Student life
Miscellaneous

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /