'Škoda Works' (
Czech: ''Škodovy závody''; today 'Škoda Holding, a.s.' plus a variety of small companies in the Czech and Slovak republics whose names still contain the word Škoda) was the largest industrial enterprise in
Austria-Hungary and later in
Czechoslovakia, one of its successor states. It was also one of the largest industrial conglomerates in Europe in the 20th century.
History
The company was founded by the noble family
Waldstein in
1859 and was bought by
Emil Škoda in
Plzeň in 1899. It soon established itself as
Austria-Hungary's leading arms manufacturer. It produced among others heavy guns for the
navy,
mountain guns or
mortars as well as
locomotives,
aircraft,
ships,
machine tools,
steam turbines and equipment for
power utilities.
During WWII
Škoda manufactured the world's first triple-barrelled gun turrets for the ''
Tegetthoff'' class of battleships of the
Austro-Hungarian navy. Prior to
World War II Škoda also produced ''LT-35'' and ''LT-38''
tanks, which are better known under their German labels ''
Panzer 35(t)'' and ''
Panzer 38(t)''. These tanks were originally produced for the
Czechoslovak army and their production continued during the occupation by
Nazi Germany. They were used extensively by the
Wehrmacht in the
Polish campaign, the
Battle of France and also in
German invasion of the Soviet Union.
After WWII
After WWII, in 1945 (the year when nationalisation efforts began in Czechoslovakia and when the Communists started to come to power) Škoda was nationalized and many sections were split from the company (e.g. the car works in Mladá Boleslav -
Škoda Auto, the aircraft plant in Prague, some factories in
Slovakia, and other plants producing food-industry equipment). The company was renamed ''Závody Vladimíra Iljiče Lenina'' (''
Vladimir Lenin Plants'') in 1951, but since the new name caused losses of sales abroad, the name was changed back to Škoda in 1953. The factory concentrated on markets in
Soviet Union and
Eastern Bloc. The company had produced wide range of heavy machinery (such as
nuclear reactors and
locomotives). Lack of updates to its product designs and infrastructure had considerably weakened the company's competitive position and its brand.
Since 1962 Škoda became well known in the
USSR and other countries as a
trolley bus manufacturer, beginning to export Škoda 9 Tr, one of its most successful trolley buses. The successor, Škoda 14 Tr, manufactured between 1982 and 1997, is still widely used, for example, in post-Soviet states.
In 1978 the company was turned into the government-owned group of companies ("koncern") Škoda. It was based in Plzeň and consisted of the companies: První brněnská strojírna [First Machine Works of Brno],
ČKD Blansko, ČKD Dukla Praha-Karlín in Prague, Slovenské energetické strojárne S. M. Kirova [Slovak S. M. Kirov Energy Machine Works] in
Tlmače, and Výskumný ústav energetických zařízení [Energy Facilities Research Institute] in Brno.
After the communist party
lost power in late 1989, the company was privatized into the hands of management. Mismanagement and assets stripping led to collapse - the company was restructured and some factories closed. Except for some smaller companies named Škoda and Škoda Auto, after the chaotic 1990s period the Czech Škoda companies were put together (again) within the
holding company 'Škoda Holding, a.s.' in 2000.
Present production
Power section is producing
steam turbines or
heat exchangers and condensers.
Transportation section is producing
trolleybuses,
tramcars,
electric locomotives,
electric multiple units or
rapid transit trainsets.
External links
★
Official website
★ History of Škoda in photos:
part 1,
part 2,
part 3 (photo descriptions in Czech)