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Reșița Works

The Reșița Works are two companies, TMK Reșița and UCM Reșița, located in Reșița, in the Banat region of Romania. Founded in 1771 and operating under a single structure until 1948 and then from 1954 to 1962, during the Communist era they were known respectively as the Reșița Steel Works (Combinatul Siderurgic Reșița) and as the Reșița Machine Building Plant (Uzina Constructoare de Mașini Reșița), the latter renamed in 1973 as the Reșița Machine Building Enterprise (Întreprinderea de Construcții de Mașini Reșița). They have played a crucial role in the industrial development both of the region and of Romania as a whole, and their evolution has been largely synonymous with that of their host city.

Dormition of the Theotokos Church flanked by blast furnaces
The steel works in 1970
The historic blast furnace #2, completed 1962

History

Beginnings and growth

The Habsburg monarchy, which then ruled the Banat, was interested in developing extractive metallurgy in the province, and began building furnaces for iron ore smelting in Reșița in 1769, those at Bocșa proving inadequate for its industrial needs.[1] The works trace their origins to July 3, 1771, when the first furnaces and forges were inaugurated, making it the oldest industrial factory in present-day Romania. At first, metalworking was the focus of activity, but machinery manufacturing gradually gained prominence, becoming the main occupation in the last quarter of the 19th century. For decades, the two complemented each other within the same integrated factory. Until 1855, the works belonged to the Treasury of what had become the Austrian Empire, which exercised control through the Banat Mining Directorate in Oravița. By 1815, they were producing cast iron pieces coming directly from the furnaces, rods forged from iron, hoops for cart wheels, tools, nails and utensils for agricultural and home use.[2]

In 1855, with the empire facing financial crisis and looking to sell,[3] the works were bought by an international consortium, the Imperial Royal Privileged Austrian State Railway Company (K.u.K Oberprivillegierte Staatseisenbahn Gesellschaft or St.E.G.). Aside from the Reșița Works, this company also owned land and mining, metalworking and railway properties in the Banat and Bohemia, a locomotive factory in Vienna and the concession for building and operating a railway network of some 5,000 km (3,100 mi), and was financed by one French and two Austrian banks.[2] A persistent legend holds that in the late 1880s, metal produced at Reșița was sent to France to be used in building the Eiffel Tower.[4][5] However, there is no documentary evidence to support this claim.[6] Since their opening, the development and fortunes of the works have been deeply entwined with the history of the city itself. An important element of their success was due to their relative self-sufficiency; over time, the works tended to use raw materials and energy sources produced on-site.[1][7]

 
Share of the Reșița Works (Uzinele de Fier și Domeniile Reșița), issued June 1926
 
The Mareșal tank destroyer had its armor plates and gun produced by the Reșița Works

Following the union of Transylvania with Romania, including the Banat, a 1920 royal decree transformed St.E.G.'s Romanian holdings into the Steel Works and Domains of Reșița (Uzinele de Fier și Domeniile Reșița; U.D.R. or U.D.R.I.N.) company. A "workshops directorate" belonging to the company was built on the left bank of the Bârzava River; this included the machine works, the old industrial platform of today's UCM Reșița, where the first St.E.G. workshops were also built between 1886 and 1891. By surface area, over 90% of the company properties were forests, but they also included iron, coal and copper mines; vineyards; roads; and limestone quarries.[2]

Starting in the 1920s, the works had the following divisions: blast furnaces; a coking plant; steelworks; rolling mills; a foundry; a forge; a factory for bridges and metal structures; a factory for mounted wheels; an old machine factory; a factory for petroleum extraction equipment; an armaments factory; a factory for electric machinery; and a locomotives factory with a capacity of 100 units per year. Among the main products generated were steam locomotives, including repairs; mounted wheels, including axles; wheel bandages, metal bridges, railroad switches and other rail equipment; metal frames for buildings and factories; moveable bridges; electric machinery and equipment such as motors, generators and transformers; petroleum extraction equipment, including pumpjacks, couplings, heavy drill bits, pump units, rotary engine parts, crown blocks and gear reducers; and armaments, such as artillery, gun carriages, 75 mm Vickers antitank and antiaircraft guns; coastal artillery; naval mines; and Brandt 60 and 120 mm LR Gun-mortars. In terms of revenue and number of employees, the company was the largest in Romania, with the latter figure reaching 22,892 in 1948.[2] In 1939, following the German occupation of Czechoslovakia, the Nazi regime took over Československá Zbrojovka's one-tenth share in Reșița. Together with other incursions into Romanian industry, this move seriously undermined the attempts of King Carol II to maintain an independent foreign policy. Subsequently, commercial and technical management ended up in the hands of Reichswerke Hermann Göring.[8]

Nationalization

In June 1948, the new Communist regime nationalized the company, along with 350 others. For over a year, it kept its former name but was gradually integrated into the new government structure. A decree issued in August 1949 led to its effective disaggregation by the end of the year, and its components were folded into two SovRom joint ventures, Sovrommetal (the iron extraction division) and Sovrom Utilaj Petrolier (the machine production division). Thus, for the first time, the Reșița Works were divided in two. In September 1954, with the end of the SovRom period, they were reunited into one entity, the Reșița Metallurgical Works (Combinatul Metalurgic Reșița) under the Ministry of Heavy Industry, later the Ministry of Metallurgy and Machine Building. After 1948, although the Reșița Works remained the most important heavy industry producers in Romania, they were gradually marginalized as well, with a series of units being shut down: metal structures and bridges (1953-1958); petroleum extraction equipment (1954-1955); railroad switches (1955); transformers, electric equipment and medium-sized electric motors (1957); mounted wheels (1959); moveable bridges and cranes (after 1973); thermal energy equipment such as steam turbines, turbo generators and related devices (1977); and locomotive bogies (1981).[2]

At the same time, significant technological advances were incorporated. Among the devices introduced were steam turbines and turbo generators; new air compressors; diesel locomotives and bogies; electrical bushings; hydroelectric units including hydraulic turbines, generators and rotation regulators; Diesel engines for marine propulsion; equipment for the chemical and metallurgical industries; fluid mechanics equipment like hydraulic pumps and large hydraulic servo motors. At the same time, steam locomotives were phased out. During four decades of a planned economy, no significant economic development program on a national scale—including the program to develop the energy supply through thermoelectric and hydroelectric machines and equipment; the nuclear power program; and the programs to develop rail transport, the naval fleet, the metallurgical, mining and chemical industries—was undertaken without a certain degree of involvement from the Reșița Works, whether by incorporating or producing machines and equipment. Additionally, their products were exported to nearly forty countries.[2]

Split and subsequent privatization

On April 1, 1962, the works were again split into two separate entities meant to operate in tandem: the Reșița Steel Works (Combinatul Siderurgic Reșița; CSR) and the Reșița Machine Building Plant (Uzina Constructoare de Mașini Reșița; UCMR or UCM).[1][2]

The Communist regime fell in 1989, and CSR had begun to decline by 1993. In December 1994, a demonstration of the 6,800 remaining workers and 30,000 Reșița residents brought about investments and new equipment.[9] CSR became a public company in 1996. Its first privatization in 2000, undertaken by a government eager to be divested of a debt-ridden entity, was a failure.[9][10] CSR's takeover by an American company accused of failing to fulfill its promise of improving the plant led to labor unrest. This was exploited by the extremist Greater Romania Party, which took control of regular demonstrations where slogans against joining the European Union and NATO became increasingly commonplace; finally, in June 2001, the government announced it would go to court to scrap the contract because of the nationwide "economic and social destabilization" risked by allowing the situation to continue.[11] The process was restarted in 2003, and the following year, the state sold it off. A subsidiary of the Russian firm OAO TMK, it has been known as TMK Reșița since 2006. It produces tubular billets, heavy round profiles and blooms, and started putting out blanks in 2007.[10][12] By 2011, the number of employees had fallen to 800, from 10,400 in 1990.[9]

UCMR was under the control of various ministries, its name being changed in 1973 to Reșița Machine Building Enterprise (Întreprinderea de Construcții de Mașini Reșița; ICMR). Between 1969 and 1973, it was the hub of Reșița Plants Group (Grupul de Uzine Reșița), which also included a metal structures plant in Bocșa, a machine plant in Caransebeș, a mechanical plant in Timișoara and an institute for research and planning hydroelectric equipment in Reșița. After the Romanian Revolution, it regained the UCMR name in 1991, and underwent a privatization process starting in 1993. This concluded in 2003, when the state sold the remainder of its shares.[2] Largely owned by a Swiss company and with some 2500 employees,[13] it is involved with machining operations on machine tools, welding, heat and thermochemical treatments and electroplating.[14]

Four industrial elements of the Reșița Works are listed as historic monuments: the UCM locomotive factory, and from the CSR, blast furnace #2, the brick factory and the puddling and steam laminating workshop. In addition, two villas belonging to the UCM authorities are listed, as well as a number of those belonging to the UDR leadership.[1][15] Although blast furnace #1 was demolished, the remaining one, representing the fifth generation of blast furnaces on the same site, was left standing due to its symbolic significance in the city's cultural identity and contribution to the industrial landscape.[1][16] By the early 1990s, the works had caused serious air, water and soil pollution,[17] making Reșița among the most severely polluted areas of Eastern Europe.[18]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e (in Romanian) Ioana Irina Iamandescu, Protecţia patrimoniului industrial al Banatului Montan, at the Association for Industrial Archaeology in Romania site; accessed February 14, 2012
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h (in Romanian) UCM Reșița - evoluția și dezvoltarea istorică at the UCM Reșița site; accessed February 14, 2012
  3. ^ (in Romanian) Lucia Honiges, "Disputa pentru un patrimoniu de 17 milioane de franci" 2017-09-05 at the Wayback Machine, Adevărul, 11 May 2006; accessed February 14, 2012
  4. ^ (in Romanian) Ciprian Iancu, "Furnalul de la Govăjdie, lăsat în paragină", Evenimentul Zilei, 7 November 2010; accessed February 18, 2012
  5. ^ (in Romanian) Daniel I. Iancu, "Furnalul de la Govăjdia", Dilema Veche, Nr. 327, May 2010; accessed February 13, 2012
  6. ^ (in Romanian) Daniel Groza, "Turnul Eiffel 'Made in Reșița, România'. Falsa legendă urbană care încă umflă orgoliul multor români", Adevărul, September 19, 2016; accessed March 7, 2018
  7. ^ (in Romanian) Istoric 2011-06-05 at the Wayback Machine at the Reșița City Hall site; accessed February 14, 2012
  8. ^ David Turnock, The Economy of East Central Europe, 1815-1989, p.255. Routledge, 2004. ISBN 0-2034-8622-6
  9. ^ a b c (in Romanian) Oana Bejenariu, "Combinatul Siderurgic Reșița, colosul industrial anihilat de capitalism", Adevărul, 13 February 2011; accessed February 14, 2012
  10. ^ a b at the TMK Reșița site; accessed February 14, 2012
  11. ^ Tom Gallagher, Modern Romania: The End of Communism, the Failure of Democratic Reform, and the Theft of a Nation, p.301. NYU Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8147-3172-4
  12. ^ at the TMK Reșița site; accessed February 14, 2012
  13. ^ (in Romanian) Generalităţi at the UCM Reșița site; accessed February 14, 2012
  14. ^ (in Romanian) Capacităţi de producţie at the UCM Reșița site; accessed February 14, 2012
  15. ^ (in Romanian) Lista Monumentelor Istorice 2010: Judeţul Caraş-Severin[permanent dead link], p.900; 902-03; 922
  16. ^ Oana Bejenariu, "Ultimul furnal din spaţiul intracarpatic, muzeul ţinut captiv de conducerea TMK", Adevărul, 5 September 2011; accessed February 14, 2012
  17. ^ Robert Atkinson, The Environment in Eastern Europe: 1990, p.51. IUCN, 1991 ISBN 2-8317-0036-1
  18. ^ Mike Mannin, Pushing back the Boundaries: the European Union and Central and Eastern Europe, p.162. Manchester University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-7190-5215-7

reșița, works, companies, reșița, reșița, located, reșița, banat, region, romania, founded, 1771, operating, under, single, structure, until, 1948, then, from, 1954, 1962, during, communist, they, were, known, respectively, reșița, steel, works, combinatul, si. The Reșița Works are two companies TMK Reșița and UCM Reșița located in Reșița in the Banat region of Romania Founded in 1771 and operating under a single structure until 1948 and then from 1954 to 1962 during the Communist era they were known respectively as the Reșița Steel Works Combinatul Siderurgic Reșița and as the Reșița Machine Building Plant Uzina Constructoare de Mașini Reșița the latter renamed in 1973 as the Reșița Machine Building Enterprise Intreprinderea de Construcții de Mașini Reșița They have played a crucial role in the industrial development both of the region and of Romania as a whole and their evolution has been largely synonymous with that of their host city Dormition of the Theotokos Church flanked by blast furnaces The steel works in 1970 The historic blast furnace 2 completed 1962 Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings and growth 1 2 Nationalization 1 3 Split and subsequent privatization 2 See also 3 NotesHistory EditBeginnings and growth Edit The Habsburg monarchy which then ruled the Banat was interested in developing extractive metallurgy in the province and began building furnaces for iron ore smelting in Reșița in 1769 those at Bocșa proving inadequate for its industrial needs 1 The works trace their origins to July 3 1771 when the first furnaces and forges were inaugurated making it the oldest industrial factory in present day Romania At first metalworking was the focus of activity but machinery manufacturing gradually gained prominence becoming the main occupation in the last quarter of the 19th century For decades the two complemented each other within the same integrated factory Until 1855 the works belonged to the Treasury of what had become the Austrian Empire which exercised control through the Banat Mining Directorate in Oravița By 1815 they were producing cast iron pieces coming directly from the furnaces rods forged from iron hoops for cart wheels tools nails and utensils for agricultural and home use 2 In 1855 with the empire facing financial crisis and looking to sell 3 the works were bought by an international consortium the Imperial Royal Privileged Austrian State Railway Company K u K Oberprivillegierte Staatseisenbahn Gesellschaft or St E G Aside from the Reșița Works this company also owned land and mining metalworking and railway properties in the Banat and Bohemia a locomotive factory in Vienna and the concession for building and operating a railway network of some 5 000 km 3 100 mi and was financed by one French and two Austrian banks 2 A persistent legend holds that in the late 1880s metal produced at Reșița was sent to France to be used in building the Eiffel Tower 4 5 However there is no documentary evidence to support this claim 6 Since their opening the development and fortunes of the works have been deeply entwined with the history of the city itself An important element of their success was due to their relative self sufficiency over time the works tended to use raw materials and energy sources produced on site 1 7 Share of the Reșița Works Uzinele de Fier și Domeniile Reșița issued June 1926 The Mareșal tank destroyer had its armor plates and gun produced by the Reșița Works Following the union of Transylvania with Romania including the Banat a 1920 royal decree transformed St E G s Romanian holdings into the Steel Works and Domains of Reșița Uzinele de Fier și Domeniile Reșița U D R or U D R I N company A workshops directorate belonging to the company was built on the left bank of the Barzava River this included the machine works the old industrial platform of today s UCM Reșița where the first St E G workshops were also built between 1886 and 1891 By surface area over 90 of the company properties were forests but they also included iron coal and copper mines vineyards roads and limestone quarries 2 Starting in the 1920s the works had the following divisions blast furnaces a coking plant steelworks rolling mills a foundry a forge a factory for bridges and metal structures a factory for mounted wheels an old machine factory a factory for petroleum extraction equipment an armaments factory a factory for electric machinery and a locomotives factory with a capacity of 100 units per year Among the main products generated were steam locomotives including repairs mounted wheels including axles wheel bandages metal bridges railroad switches and other rail equipment metal frames for buildings and factories moveable bridges electric machinery and equipment such as motors generators and transformers petroleum extraction equipment including pumpjacks couplings heavy drill bits pump units rotary engine parts crown blocks and gear reducers and armaments such as artillery gun carriages 75 mm Vickers antitank and antiaircraft guns coastal artillery naval mines and Brandt 60 and 120 mm LR Gun mortars In terms of revenue and number of employees the company was the largest in Romania with the latter figure reaching 22 892 in 1948 2 In 1939 following the German occupation of Czechoslovakia the Nazi regime took over Ceskoslovenska Zbrojovka s one tenth share in Reșița Together with other incursions into Romanian industry this move seriously undermined the attempts of King Carol II to maintain an independent foreign policy Subsequently commercial and technical management ended up in the hands of Reichswerke Hermann Goring 8 Nationalization Edit In June 1948 the new Communist regime nationalized the company along with 350 others For over a year it kept its former name but was gradually integrated into the new government structure A decree issued in August 1949 led to its effective disaggregation by the end of the year and its components were folded into two SovRom joint ventures Sovrommetal the iron extraction division and Sovrom Utilaj Petrolier the machine production division Thus for the first time the Reșița Works were divided in two In September 1954 with the end of the SovRom period they were reunited into one entity the Reșița Metallurgical Works Combinatul Metalurgic Reșița under the Ministry of Heavy Industry later the Ministry of Metallurgy and Machine Building After 1948 although the Reșița Works remained the most important heavy industry producers in Romania they were gradually marginalized as well with a series of units being shut down metal structures and bridges 1953 1958 petroleum extraction equipment 1954 1955 railroad switches 1955 transformers electric equipment and medium sized electric motors 1957 mounted wheels 1959 moveable bridges and cranes after 1973 thermal energy equipment such as steam turbines turbo generators and related devices 1977 and locomotive bogies 1981 2 At the same time significant technological advances were incorporated Among the devices introduced were steam turbines and turbo generators new air compressors diesel locomotives and bogies electrical bushings hydroelectric units including hydraulic turbines generators and rotation regulators Diesel engines for marine propulsion equipment for the chemical and metallurgical industries fluid mechanics equipment like hydraulic pumps and large hydraulic servo motors At the same time steam locomotives were phased out During four decades of a planned economy no significant economic development program on a national scale including the program to develop the energy supply through thermoelectric and hydroelectric machines and equipment the nuclear power program and the programs to develop rail transport the naval fleet the metallurgical mining and chemical industries was undertaken without a certain degree of involvement from the Reșița Works whether by incorporating or producing machines and equipment Additionally their products were exported to nearly forty countries 2 Split and subsequent privatization Edit On April 1 1962 the works were again split into two separate entities meant to operate in tandem the Reșița Steel Works Combinatul Siderurgic Reșița CSR and the Reșița Machine Building Plant Uzina Constructoare de Mașini Reșița UCMR or UCM 1 2 The Communist regime fell in 1989 and CSR had begun to decline by 1993 In December 1994 a demonstration of the 6 800 remaining workers and 30 000 Reșița residents brought about investments and new equipment 9 CSR became a public company in 1996 Its first privatization in 2000 undertaken by a government eager to be divested of a debt ridden entity was a failure 9 10 CSR s takeover by an American company accused of failing to fulfill its promise of improving the plant led to labor unrest This was exploited by the extremist Greater Romania Party which took control of regular demonstrations where slogans against joining the European Union and NATO became increasingly commonplace finally in June 2001 the government announced it would go to court to scrap the contract because of the nationwide economic and social destabilization risked by allowing the situation to continue 11 The process was restarted in 2003 and the following year the state sold it off A subsidiary of the Russian firm OAO TMK it has been known as TMK Reșița since 2006 It produces tubular billets heavy round profiles and blooms and started putting out blanks in 2007 10 12 By 2011 the number of employees had fallen to 800 from 10 400 in 1990 9 UCMR was under the control of various ministries its name being changed in 1973 to Reșița Machine Building Enterprise Intreprinderea de Construcții de Mașini Reșița ICMR Between 1969 and 1973 it was the hub of Reșița Plants Group Grupul de Uzine Reșița which also included a metal structures plant in Bocșa a machine plant in Caransebeș a mechanical plant in Timișoara and an institute for research and planning hydroelectric equipment in Reșița After the Romanian Revolution it regained the UCMR name in 1991 and underwent a privatization process starting in 1993 This concluded in 2003 when the state sold the remainder of its shares 2 Largely owned by a Swiss company and with some 2500 employees 13 it is involved with machining operations on machine tools welding heat and thermochemical treatments and electroplating 14 Four industrial elements of the Reșița Works are listed as historic monuments the UCM locomotive factory and from the CSR blast furnace 2 the brick factory and the puddling and steam laminating workshop In addition two villas belonging to the UCM authorities are listed as well as a number of those belonging to the UDR leadership 1 15 Although blast furnace 1 was demolished the remaining one representing the fifth generation of blast furnaces on the same site was left standing due to its symbolic significance in the city s cultural identity and contribution to the industrial landscape 1 16 By the early 1990s the works had caused serious air water and soil pollution 17 making Reșița among the most severely polluted areas of Eastern Europe 18 Machine workers during nationalization 1948 Steel workers 1950 Scinteia announcement of a new blast furnace 1962 Workers welcoming Nicolae Ceaușescu and Ion Gheorghe Maurer 1968 Visit by Ceaușescu to the machine factory 1978 1996 postage stamp commemorating 225 years of operations Reșița coats of arms interwar period Communist period Present daySee also EditGalați steel works FAURNotes Edit a b c d e in Romanian Ioana Irina Iamandescu Protecţia patrimoniului industrial al Banatului Montan at the Association for Industrial Archaeology in Romania site accessed February 14 2012 a b c d e f g h in Romanian UCM Reșița evoluția și dezvoltarea istorică at the UCM Reșița site accessed February 14 2012 in Romanian Lucia Honiges Disputa pentru un patrimoniu de 17 milioane de franci Archived 2017 09 05 at the Wayback Machine Adevărul 11 May 2006 accessed February 14 2012 in Romanian Ciprian Iancu Furnalul de la Govăjdie lăsat in paragină Evenimentul Zilei 7 November 2010 accessed February 18 2012 in Romanian Daniel I Iancu Furnalul de la Govăjdia Dilema Veche Nr 327 May 2010 accessed February 13 2012 in Romanian Daniel Groza Turnul Eiffel Made in Reșița Romania Falsa legendă urbană care incă umflă orgoliul multor romani Adevărul September 19 2016 accessed March 7 2018 in Romanian Istoric Archived 2011 06 05 at the Wayback Machine at the Reșița City Hall site accessed February 14 2012 David Turnock The Economy of East Central Europe 1815 1989 p 255 Routledge 2004 ISBN 0 2034 8622 6 a b c in Romanian Oana Bejenariu Combinatul Siderurgic Reșița colosul industrial anihilat de capitalism Adevărul 13 February 2011 accessed February 14 2012 a b History at the TMK Reșița site accessed February 14 2012 Tom Gallagher Modern Romania The End of Communism the Failure of Democratic Reform and the Theft of a Nation p 301 NYU Press 2005 ISBN 0 8147 3172 4 Profile at the TMK Reșița site accessed February 14 2012 in Romanian Generalităţi at the UCM Reșița site accessed February 14 2012 in Romanian Capacităţi de producţie at the UCM Reșița site accessed February 14 2012 in Romanian Lista Monumentelor Istorice 2010 Judeţul Caras Severin permanent dead link p 900 902 03 922 Oana Bejenariu Ultimul furnal din spaţiul intracarpatic muzeul ţinut captiv de conducerea TMK Adevărul 5 September 2011 accessed February 14 2012 Robert Atkinson The Environment in Eastern Europe 1990 p 51 IUCN 1991 ISBN 2 8317 0036 1 Mike Mannin Pushing back the Boundaries the European Union and Central and Eastern Europe p 162 Manchester University Press 1999 ISBN 0 7190 5215 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reșița Works amp oldid 1139516769, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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