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Volgograd Tractor Plant

The Volgograd Tractor Plant (Russian: Волгоградский тракторный завод, Volgogradski traktorni zavod, or ВгТЗ, VgTZ), formerly the Dzerzhinskiy Tractor Factory or the Stalingrad Tractor Plant, is a heavy equipment factory located in Volgograd, Russia. It was once one of the largest tractor manufacturing enterprises in the USSR. It was a site of fierce fighting during World War II's Battle of Stalingrad.

Volgograd Tractor Plant
Native name
Russian: Волгоградский тракторный завод
Company typeOpen joint-stock company
IndustryMachinery, Defence
Founded1930; 94 years ago (1930)
Headquarters,
Area served
worldwide
ProductsTractors, Artillery, Combat vehicles
Revenue RUB 873 million (2011)
RUB 229 million (2011)
ParentConcern Tractor Plants

During its lifetime, VgTZ has supplied more than 2.5 million tractors to the farming industry, making a huge contribution to the mechanization of agriculture. VgTZ tractors operate in 32 countries throughout Southeast Asia, Africa, Europe, North America, and Latin America.[1] Also used for the production of military vehicles, VgTZ is inextricably linked with the history of Soviet tank building.[2] The plant continues to operate on a small scale, but much of it is now derelict or has been demolished.[3]

History edit

 
Stalingrad Tractor Plant in the 1930s
 
Factory ruins in November 1942
 
Stalingrad Tractor Plant on a 1947 stamp

Until 1961, the plant was called the Stalingrad Tractor Plant named for F. Dzerzhinsky (Russian: Сталинградский тракторный завод им. Ф. Э. Дзержинского, Stalingradski traktorni zavod im. F.E. Dzerzhinskogo, or СТЗ, STZ). It was one of the first industrial facilities to be built as part of the planned rapid industrialization of the USSR, which was adopted in the late 1920s. The foundation stone was laid in a groundbreaking ceremony on July 12, 1926.[1][4]

Construction of the plant was carried out with the involvement of experts from Western countries, primarily the United States. It was designed by Albert Kahn Associates Inc., the company started by Albert Kahn, the architect for Henry Ford.[5] In 1928, a group of Soviet engineers visited Kahn's office with an order for designing and building the Stalingrad Tractor Plant, and in April 1929, the Soviet trade representative Saul Bron signed the contract with Albert Kahn.[6] The full value of the contract, including equipment, was US$30 million, which would equate to about US$450 million in today's money.[4]

Once the contract was agreed, design and construction of the plant proceeded without delay, and the entire facility was installed within a period of six months under the supervision of American engineers.[6] The steel structures were manufactured in New York by the McClintic-Marshall Company, and then transported to Stalingrad for field assembly. The huge flow of cargo was shipped via the Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean and Black Sea, then by river and over land to the place of construction.[4] The plant was kitted out with equipment from more than eighty US engineering companies and several German firms.[7]

The new factory was officially opened on June 17, 1930, and the first tractor to begin production on the assembly line was the 15-30, manufactured in the USA by the McCormick Deering company; in the USSR, it became known as the 15/30 STZ (or STZ-1).[4] By April 1932, the Stalingrad Tractor Plant was working at full capacity, with 144 tractors a day rolling off the conveyor.[1]

Tank production began in 1932 with the launch of the T-26 light infantry tank, which was easy to manufacture and operate, and considered to be more reliable than foreign equivalents.[2] In 1939, the first automated machine tool line in the USSR was designed and commissioned at the Volgograd Tractor Plant on the initiative of I. P. Inochkina,[1] a design engineer who worked at the plant for 35 years.[8] By the end of the 1940s, dozens of such lines were in operation at bearing and automotive plants.[9]

By the time war broke out in September 1939, the tractor plant had produced a quarter of a million standard tractors as well as 40,000 tracked versions. During World War II, the plant was retooled to produce military equipment and weapons for the Soviet Red Army, most notably the T-34 tank.[3] The plant became world-famous during the Battle of Stalingrad. When the German Wehrmacht reached the city in the summer of 1942, the tractor plant was their first target, and it was largely destroyed during the fierce fighting that ensued over the next few months.[1] Once the hostilities had ended with the final victory in February 1943, the site was cleared of shells and debris so that restoration work could begin immediately. Full-scale production resumed at the plant within months of the city being liberated.[3]

Decline and regeneration edit

In 1992, the Volgograd Tractor Plant became a private joint-stock company, and entered a period of economic uncertainty with a decline in productivity. The company was floated on the public stock market in 1995 and became an OJSC. By the late 1990s, the plant was producing fewer than 3,000 tractors per year.[4]

In December 2002, following rising debts and many changes in ownership, OJSC Volgograd Tractor Plant was divided into four separate business units within the group:

  • OJSC Tractor Company VgTZ (Traktornaya kompaniya VgTZ)
  • OJSC Russian Engineering Components (Rossiyskiye mashinostroitel'nyye komponenty)
  • OJSC Territory of Industrial Development (Territoriya promyshlennogo raszvitiya)
  • OJSC Volgograd Tractor Plant (Volgogradski traktorni zavod)

Responsibility for military technology projects was allocated to a separate concern, the Volgograd Machine Building Company VgTZ (Volgogradskaya mashinostroitel'naya kompaniya VgTZ), which was not connected to the "Volgograd Tractor Plant" group of companies.[1]

In 2003, the OJSC Volgograd Tractor Plant group became part of OJSC Agromashholding, which specializes in the production, sale and service of agricultural, municipal and industrial equipment. The OJSC Volgograd Tractor subdivision of the group was declared bankrupt in 2005.[4] Then in 2006, OJSC Tractor Company VgTZ was acquired by the non-commercial partnership Concern Tractor Plants, a leading Russian machine building company, of which OJSC Agromashholding is an agricultural division. VgTZ thrived under its new owners, and achieved a stable monthly performance for the whole of 2006, with almost 3,000 tracked tractors leaving the conveyor, including 768 of the promising VT series and 1,290 tractors with industrial modifications.

 
Volgograd Tractor Plant in 2011. From left to right: Dzerzhinsky monument, tractor factory aisle, monument to T-34 tank

The OJSC Tractor Company VgTZ subdivision eventually ceased tractor production altogether in November 2015.[4]

In April 2017, the Russian Deputy Minister of Defense, Yury Borisov, visited OJSC Volgograd Tractor Plant to check on progress of the State Defense Order for new military vehicles. According to Borisov, the company was experiencing financial difficulties at the time.[10] A decision was taken to merge the military side of the concern with the state-owned holding company Rostec, in order to stabilize the plant's financial position.[4]

The separate Volgograd Machine Building Company, which is still based at the plant, continues to manufacture Sprut-SDM1 self-propelled anti-tank guns and BMD-4M airborne combat vehicles for the Russian Airborne Troops.[11]

In the spring of 2019, reconstruction work began on the ruins of the tractor plant, with plans to regenerate the area into a multipurpose center, including shops, office buildings, and apartments. All that remains of the VgTZ works is a series of walk-through plants and two monuments in the square. The workshops have been demolished and the new owner rents the former factory management premises as office space. There is a small museum dedicated to the rich history of the Volgograd Tractor Plant. The northern terminus station on the Volgograd Metrotram still bears the name Traktornyy Zavod ("Tractor Factory").[4]

Awards edit

Products edit

Military vehicles edit

  • T-26 (1932–1940), light infantry tank
  • T-34 (1940–1944), medium tank
  • STZ-5 (STZ-NATI 2TB) (1937–1942), 52–56 hp (39–42 kW) tracked artillery tractor, nicknamed "Stalinets"
  • PT-76 (1951–1967), light amphibious tank
  • BTR-50 (1954–1970), armored personnel carrier (based on PT-76 chassis)
  • BTR-D (from 1974), armored personnel carrier
  • BMD-1 (1968–1987), tracked amphibious infantry fighting vehicle (IFV)
  • BMD-2 (from 1985), tracked amphibious IFV
  • BMD-3 (1985–1997), tracked amphibious IFV
  • BMD-4 (2004–present), tracked amphibious IFV
  • 2S25 Sprut-SD (1984–2010 2018-), self-propelled anti-tank gun

Tractors edit

  • STZ-1 (STZ 15/30) (1930–1937), 30 hp (22 kW) wheeled tractor
  • STZ-3 (STZ-NATI 1TA) (1937–1949), 52 hp (39 kW) tracked tractor (same chassis/engine as STZ-5)
  • STZ-8 (1938–1941), swamp tractor
  • DT-54 (1949–1963), 54 hp (40 kW) diesel tracked tractor
  • DT-55 (1955), swamp tractor
  • DT-75 (from 1963), 75 hp (56 kW) tracked tractor, hydraulic suspension system
  • DT-75M (from 1963), 90 hp (67 kW) tracked tractor
  • VT-100 (from 1994), 120 hp (89 kW) tracked tractor
  • VT-150 (from 2005), 150 hp (110 kW) tracked tractor
  • DT-175 (1986–1994)
  • Agromash 90TG (2009–present)
  • Agromash 315TG

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f [Volgograd Tractor Plant (history reference)]. Real Economy Information Portal. 2007. Archived from the original on June 5, 2008.
  2. ^ a b "Творцы бронетанковой техники" [Armored vehicle makers]. Avtomash (in Russian). from the original on August 12, 2014. Retrieved June 21, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c "Tractor Factory". dark-tourism.com. from the original on June 24, 2019. Retrieved June 24, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Tractor, tank, shopping centre... As was born, lived and died the first Soviet tractor factory". csef.ru. Center for Strategic Assessment and Forecasts. June 14, 2019. from the original on June 21, 2019.
  5. ^ Crawford, Christina E. (Spring 2015). "Soviet Planning Praxis: From Tractors to Territory". Centrepiece. 29 (2). WCFIA, Harvard University. from the original on August 10, 2015. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
  6. ^ a b Meerovich, M. G. (2009). [Albert Kahn in the history of Soviet Industrialization]. Architecton (in Russian). Archived from the original on December 28, 2009. Retrieved June 21, 2019.
  7. ^ Rubchenko, Maxim (December 28, 2009). [Hooray for the Great Depression!]. Expert (in Russian). Archived from the original on January 4, 2010.
  8. ^ "Inochkin with tractor... (1963)" (film archive). net-film.ru. from the original on June 9, 2019. Retrieved June 22, 2019.
  9. ^ "First automatic line". ngpedia.ru. Большая энциклопедия нефти и газа [Big Encyclopedia of Oil and Gas]. from the original on February 5, 2019. Retrieved June 22, 2019.
  10. ^ "Deputy Minister of Defense Yuri Borisov checked the progress of the State Defense Order at the Volgograd Tractor Plant". function.mil.ru. Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation. April 26, 2017. from the original on September 25, 2017.
  11. ^ "The commander of the Airborne Forces checked the production of the Sprut-SDM1 at the Volgograd Tractor Plant". tass.ru. TASS. October 19, 2018. from the original on November 5, 2018.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • (in Russian) – latest archive dated October 19, 2018
  • My Stalingrad Childhood, A memoir by Edward Ochagavia (reprinted from East-West Review)
  • Volgograd's top tractor plant – aerial views of factory ruins (2016 YouTube video)
  • Stalingrad Tractor Plant, photograph of a bird's-eye perspective drawing, Albert Kahn Associates, 1930s, Canadian Centre for Architecture

48°48′0.7″N 44°36′37.03″E / 48.800194°N 44.6102861°E / 48.800194; 44.6102861

volgograd, tractor, plant, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, russian, december, 2015, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, po. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian December 2015 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 1 220 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at ru Volgogradskij traktornyj zavod see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated ru Volgogradskij traktornyj zavod to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Volgograd Tractor Plant Russian Volgogradskij traktornyj zavod Volgogradski traktorni zavod or VgTZ VgTZ formerly the Dzerzhinskiy Tractor Factory or the Stalingrad Tractor Plant is a heavy equipment factory located in Volgograd Russia It was once one of the largest tractor manufacturing enterprises in the USSR It was a site of fierce fighting during World War II s Battle of Stalingrad Volgograd Tractor PlantNative nameRussian Volgogradskij traktornyj zavodCompany typeOpen joint stock companyIndustryMachinery DefenceFounded1930 94 years ago 1930 HeadquartersVolgograd Volgograd Oblast RussiaArea servedworldwideProductsTractors Artillery Combat vehiclesRevenueRUB 873 million 2011 Net incomeRUB 229 million 2011 ParentConcern Tractor Plants During its lifetime VgTZ has supplied more than 2 5 million tractors to the farming industry making a huge contribution to the mechanization of agriculture VgTZ tractors operate in 32 countries throughout Southeast Asia Africa Europe North America and Latin America 1 Also used for the production of military vehicles VgTZ is inextricably linked with the history of Soviet tank building 2 The plant continues to operate on a small scale but much of it is now derelict or has been demolished 3 Contents 1 History 2 Decline and regeneration 3 Awards 4 Products 4 1 Military vehicles 4 2 Tractors 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Stalingrad Tractor Plant in the 1930s nbsp Factory ruins in November 1942 nbsp Stalingrad Tractor Plant on a 1947 stamp Until 1961 the plant was called the Stalingrad Tractor Plant named for F Dzerzhinsky Russian Stalingradskij traktornyj zavod im F E Dzerzhinskogo Stalingradski traktorni zavod im F E Dzerzhinskogo or STZ STZ It was one of the first industrial facilities to be built as part of the planned rapid industrialization of the USSR which was adopted in the late 1920s The foundation stone was laid in a groundbreaking ceremony on July 12 1926 1 4 Construction of the plant was carried out with the involvement of experts from Western countries primarily the United States It was designed by Albert Kahn Associates Inc the company started by Albert Kahn the architect for Henry Ford 5 In 1928 a group of Soviet engineers visited Kahn s office with an order for designing and building the Stalingrad Tractor Plant and in April 1929 the Soviet trade representative Saul Bron signed the contract with Albert Kahn 6 The full value of the contract including equipment was US 30 million which would equate to about US 450 million in today s money 4 Once the contract was agreed design and construction of the plant proceeded without delay and the entire facility was installed within a period of six months under the supervision of American engineers 6 The steel structures were manufactured in New York by the McClintic Marshall Company and then transported to Stalingrad for field assembly The huge flow of cargo was shipped via the Atlantic Ocean the Mediterranean and Black Sea then by river and over land to the place of construction 4 The plant was kitted out with equipment from more than eighty US engineering companies and several German firms 7 The new factory was officially opened on June 17 1930 and the first tractor to begin production on the assembly line was the 15 30 manufactured in the USA by the McCormick Deering company in the USSR it became known as the 15 30 STZ or STZ 1 4 By April 1932 the Stalingrad Tractor Plant was working at full capacity with 144 tractors a day rolling off the conveyor 1 Tank production began in 1932 with the launch of the T 26 light infantry tank which was easy to manufacture and operate and considered to be more reliable than foreign equivalents 2 In 1939 the first automated machine tool line in the USSR was designed and commissioned at the Volgograd Tractor Plant on the initiative of I P Inochkina 1 a design engineer who worked at the plant for 35 years 8 By the end of the 1940s dozens of such lines were in operation at bearing and automotive plants 9 By the time war broke out in September 1939 the tractor plant had produced a quarter of a million standard tractors as well as 40 000 tracked versions During World War II the plant was retooled to produce military equipment and weapons for the Soviet Red Army most notably the T 34 tank 3 The plant became world famous during the Battle of Stalingrad When the German Wehrmacht reached the city in the summer of 1942 the tractor plant was their first target and it was largely destroyed during the fierce fighting that ensued over the next few months 1 Once the hostilities had ended with the final victory in February 1943 the site was cleared of shells and debris so that restoration work could begin immediately Full scale production resumed at the plant within months of the city being liberated 3 Decline and regeneration editIn 1992 the Volgograd Tractor Plant became a private joint stock company and entered a period of economic uncertainty with a decline in productivity The company was floated on the public stock market in 1995 and became an OJSC By the late 1990s the plant was producing fewer than 3 000 tractors per year 4 In December 2002 following rising debts and many changes in ownership OJSC Volgograd Tractor Plant was divided into four separate business units within the group OJSC Tractor Company VgTZ Traktornaya kompaniya VgTZ OJSC Russian Engineering Components Rossiyskiye mashinostroitel nyye komponenty OJSC Territory of Industrial Development Territoriya promyshlennogo raszvitiya OJSC Volgograd Tractor Plant Volgogradski traktorni zavod Responsibility for military technology projects was allocated to a separate concern the Volgograd Machine Building Company VgTZ Volgogradskaya mashinostroitel naya kompaniya VgTZ which was not connected to the Volgograd Tractor Plant group of companies 1 In 2003 the OJSC Volgograd Tractor Plant group became part of OJSC Agromashholding which specializes in the production sale and service of agricultural municipal and industrial equipment The OJSC Volgograd Tractor subdivision of the group was declared bankrupt in 2005 4 Then in 2006 OJSC Tractor Company VgTZ was acquired by the non commercial partnership Concern Tractor Plants a leading Russian machine building company of which OJSC Agromashholding is an agricultural division VgTZ thrived under its new owners and achieved a stable monthly performance for the whole of 2006 with almost 3 000 tracked tractors leaving the conveyor including 768 of the promising VT series and 1 290 tractors with industrial modifications nbsp Volgograd Tractor Plant in 2011 From left to right Dzerzhinsky monument tractor factory aisle monument to T 34 tank The OJSC Tractor Company VgTZ subdivision eventually ceased tractor production altogether in November 2015 4 In April 2017 the Russian Deputy Minister of Defense Yury Borisov visited OJSC Volgograd Tractor Plant to check on progress of the State Defense Order for new military vehicles According to Borisov the company was experiencing financial difficulties at the time 10 A decision was taken to merge the military side of the concern with the state owned holding company Rostec in order to stabilize the plant s financial position 4 The separate Volgograd Machine Building Company which is still based at the plant continues to manufacture Sprut SDM1 self propelled anti tank guns and BMD 4M airborne combat vehicles for the Russian Airborne Troops 11 In the spring of 2019 reconstruction work began on the ruins of the tractor plant with plans to regenerate the area into a multipurpose center including shops office buildings and apartments All that remains of the VgTZ works is a series of walk through plants and two monuments in the square The workshops have been demolished and the new owner rents the former factory management premises as office space There is a small museum dedicated to the rich history of the Volgograd Tractor Plant The northern terminus station on the Volgograd Metrotram still bears the name Traktornyy Zavod Tractor Factory 4 Awards editOrder of Lenin May 17 1932 Order of the Red Banner of Labor February 8 1942 for the exemplary fulfillment of the government s assignment for the production of tanks and tank engines Order of the Patriotic War 1st degree February 7 1945 Order of Lenin January 14 1970 Products editMilitary vehicles edit T 26 1932 1940 light infantry tank T 34 1940 1944 medium tank STZ 5 STZ NATI 2TB 1937 1942 52 56 hp 39 42 kW tracked artillery tractor nicknamed Stalinets PT 76 1951 1967 light amphibious tank BTR 50 1954 1970 armored personnel carrier based on PT 76 chassis BTR D from 1974 armored personnel carrier BMD 1 1968 1987 tracked amphibious infantry fighting vehicle IFV BMD 2 from 1985 tracked amphibious IFV BMD 3 1985 1997 tracked amphibious IFV BMD 4 2004 present tracked amphibious IFV 2S25 Sprut SD 1984 2010 2018 self propelled anti tank gun nbsp T 34 nbsp Katusha BM 13 STZ 5 NATI nbsp PT 76 nbsp BMD 4 nbsp 2S25 Sprut SD Tractors edit STZ 1 STZ 15 30 1930 1937 30 hp 22 kW wheeled tractor STZ 3 STZ NATI 1TA 1937 1949 52 hp 39 kW tracked tractor same chassis engine as STZ 5 STZ 8 1938 1941 swamp tractor DT 54 1949 1963 54 hp 40 kW diesel tracked tractor DT 55 1955 swamp tractor DT 75 from 1963 75 hp 56 kW tracked tractor hydraulic suspension system DT 75M from 1963 90 hp 67 kW tracked tractor VT 100 from 1994 120 hp 89 kW tracked tractor VT 150 from 2005 150 hp 110 kW tracked tractor DT 175 1986 1994 Agromash 90TG 2009 present Agromash 315TG nbsp STZ NATI nbsp DT 54 nbsp DT 75 tractor of early production in Poland nbsp DT 75 nbsp VT 100See also editSoviet tank factories Soviet armored fighting vehicle production during World War IIReferences edit a b c d e f Volgogradskij traktornyj zavod istoricheskaya spravka Volgograd Tractor Plant history reference Real Economy Information Portal 2007 Archived from the original on June 5 2008 a b Tvorcy bronetankovoj tehniki Armored vehicle makers Avtomash in Russian Archived from the original on August 12 2014 Retrieved June 21 2019 a b c Tractor Factory dark tourism com Archived from the original on June 24 2019 Retrieved June 24 2019 a b c d e f g h i Tractor tank shopping centre As was born lived and died the first Soviet tractor factory csef ru Center for Strategic Assessment and Forecasts June 14 2019 Archived from the original on June 21 2019 Crawford Christina E Spring 2015 Soviet Planning Praxis From Tractors to Territory Centrepiece 29 2 WCFIA Harvard University Archived from the original on August 10 2015 Retrieved January 16 2022 a b Meerovich M G 2009 Albert Kan v istorii sovetskoj industrializacii Albert Kahn in the history of Soviet Industrialization Architecton in Russian Archived from the original on December 28 2009 Retrieved June 21 2019 Rubchenko Maxim December 28 2009 Ura u nih depressiya Hooray for the Great Depression Expert in Russian Archived from the original on January 4 2010 Inochkin with tractor 1963 film archive net film ru Archived from the original on June 9 2019 Retrieved June 22 2019 First automatic line ngpedia ru Bolshaya enciklopediya nefti i gaza Big Encyclopedia of Oil and Gas Archived from the original on February 5 2019 Retrieved June 22 2019 Deputy Minister of Defense Yuri Borisov checked the progress of the State Defense Order at the Volgograd Tractor Plant function mil ru Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation April 26 2017 Archived from the original on September 25 2017 The commander of the Airborne Forces checked the production of the Sprut SDM1 at the Volgograd Tractor Plant tass ru TASS October 19 2018 Archived from the original on November 5 2018 Further reading editMelnikova Raich Sonia 2010 The Soviet Problem with Two Unknowns How an American Architect and a Soviet Negotiator Jump Started the Industrialization of Russia Part I Albert Kahn IA The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology 36 2 57 80 ISSN 0160 1040 JSTOR 41933723 abstract External links editConcern Tractor Plants official website in Russian latest archive dated October 19 2018 My Stalingrad Childhood A memoir by Edward Ochagavia reprinted from East West Review Volgograd s top tractor plant aerial views of factory ruins 2016 YouTube video Stalingrad Tractor Plant photograph of a bird s eye perspective drawing Albert Kahn Associates 1930s Canadian Centre for Architecture 48 48 0 7 N 44 36 37 03 E 48 800194 N 44 6102861 E 48 800194 44 6102861 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Volgograd Tractor Plant amp oldid 1221528422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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