Volvo Construction Equipment

Volvo Construction Equipment
Formerly called
VME Group
Public
Industry Heavy equipment
Predecessors
  • Eskilstuna Mekaniska Verkstad
  • Munktells Mekaniska Verkstads Aktiebolag
  • AB Bolinder-Munktell
  • Volvo BM
Founded 1832 (1832) in Eskilstuna, Sweden
Founders
  • Johan Theofron Munktell
  • Jean (Johan) Gerhard Bolinder
  • Carl Gerhard Bolinder
Headquarters Brussels, Belgium
Areas served
Worldwide
Key people
  • Martin Weissburg (President & CEO)
  • Eberhard Wedekind (EVP)
  • Carl Lockwood (SVP Strategy & Business Development)
  • Bill Law (SVP Corporate Communications)
  • Jean-Marc des Courieres (EVP Operations)
  • Anders Larsson (SVP & CTO
  • Jonas Jademyr (SVP Quality Development & Core Value Management)
Products
  • compactors
  • demolition equipment
  • dumpers
  • excavators
  • haulers
  • loaders
  • material transfer vehicles
  • milling equipment
  • motor graders
  • pavers
  • pipelayers
  • road wideners
  • tack distributors
  • waste handlers
Brands
Services
  • Used Equipment Network
  • Customer Support
Revenue
  • Decrease 52.9 billion kr (2014)
  • 53.4 billion kr (2013)
  • Decrease1231 million kr (2014)
  • 2592 million kr (2013)
Number of employees
14901 (2014)
Parent Volvo
Website volvoce.com

Footnotes / references

Volvo Construction Equipment - Volvo CE - (originally Munktells, Bolinder-Munktell, Volvo BM) (stylized as VOLVO) is a major international company that develops, manufactures and markets equipment for construction and related industries. It is a subsidiary and business area of the Volvo Group.

Overview

A heavily modified Volvo is used to launch large balloon payloads at Esrange in northern Sweden.

Volvo CE's products include a range of wheel loaders, hydraulic excavators, articulated haulers, motor graders, soil and asphalt compactors, pavers, backhoe loaders, skid steers and milling machines. Volvo CE has production facilities in USA, Brazil, Scotland, Sweden, France, Germany, Poland, India, China, Russia and Korea. Headquarters are located in Brussels, Belgium. The company also offers worldwide service and a range of aftermarket solutions in financing and used equipment. In December 2014, its number of employees is estimated at almost 15,000.

Volvo CE sells machines under three brands: Volvo, SDLG and Terex Trucks.

History

Volvo BM tractor
Volvo A25D

Three men laid the foundation for Volvo Construction Equipment: Johan Theofron Munktell and the brothers Jean Bolinder and Carl Gerhard Bolinder.[1]

In 1832, Johan Theofron Munktell, then only 27, founds what became Volvo Construction Equipment in Eskilstuna, Sweden. In 1913, Munktell and his team produce Sweden's first tractor. Meanwhile, elsewhere in Sweden, other visionaries and entrepreneurs were making progress: brothers Jean and Carl Gerhard Bolinder of Stockholm had been thriving since 1844 manufacturing steam engines and crude engine oil.

In 1932, exactly one-hundred years after Johan Theofron Munktell’s start in Eskilstuna, Bolinder moves to Eskilstuna and both companies merge under the name AB Bolinder-Munktell, creating a combined experience of 188 years of manufacturing and industrial know-how. In 1934, Bolinder Munktell produces the legendary BM 25 tractor.

In 1950, Volvo buys the machine manufacturer Bolinder-Munktell (BM). Four years later in 1954, the company produces its first wheel loader H10; the world's first to feature a parallel lift arm system and attachment bracket, establishing Volvo as one of the leading construction companies in the world. They built on the success 12 years later with the world's first articulated hauler: the legendary Volvo DR 631 Gravel Charlie - in 1966.

In 1973, the company name changes to Volvo BM AB in order to strengthen the Volvo identity. In 1985, Volvo BM allies itself with the American manufacturer Clark Equipment and its subsidiary Euclid. The product name Clark Michigan was abbreviated to Michigan and the three brand names Volvo BM, Michigan and Euclid were incorporated in the new company VME Group.

In 1995, VME becomes a fully owned Volvo company and changes name to Volvo Construction Equipment.

In 1998, Volvo CE became the first foreign company ever to invest in Korea. The acquisition of Samsung Heavy Industries (Construction Equipment Division ) strengthened its product offerings and presence in Asia.

In January 2007, Volvo purchases 70% of Shandong Lingong Construction Machinery Co. Ltd. In April of the same year, Volvo also finalizes acquisition of the American company Ingersoll Rand's division for road construction machines.

In 2011, Volvo CE wins Red Dot Design Award for its L220G wheel loader. The next year, in 2012, Volvo wins the Red Dot Best of the Best Award for its A40F articulated hauler.

The same year in 2012, Volvo CE became the world's first construction equipment company to join the World Wide Fund for Nature's Climate Savers Program committing itself to the most ambitious carbon-reduction agenda ever undertaken within the industry.

See also

References

  1. "Looking Back - Moving Forward" (PDF). Retrieved 5 October 2015.
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