Chronik Volkswagen AG
Transcription
Chronik Volkswagen AG
1961–1972 The Beetle-maker between Boom and Crisis Mass production of the Beetle and the flourishing export business help Volkswagen reach a leading position in Europe. Thanks to greater productivity, the company built twice as many automobiles in 1964 as the second place manufacturer. In Germany, Volkswagen reached a share of almost 33 percent in the passenger car market, and more than half of newly registered vans carried the Volkswagen trademark. Volkswagen overcame the switch from a seller's market to a buyer's market during the earlier 1960s without a slump in sales by adding the VW 1500 to its product range and by increasing its presence on international markets. In 1963, the world's largest automobile exporter sold about 60 percent of its production to European markets and to the United States, where the Beetle's popularity was comparable to its dominance at home. After four good years with an average growth of 20 percent, exports to the United States rose to just under 330,000 in 1964. At the end of the year, the plant erected in Emden began assembling the Beetle in order to assure sufficient supplies for the North American market. Exports to Europe, however, did cause some concern. On the one hand, protectionist measures made Volkswagen's appearance on some of these markets troublesome. It was especially difficult to gain ground in Italy and France during the early 1960s. On the other hand, competition grew noticeably in Volkswagen's main European markets after other manufacturers raised quality and features of their vehicles to Volkswagen standards. Even in a domestic market long dominated by the Beetle, times were changing. American manufacturers brought their large 1.5-liter automobiles onto the market, and their appearance appealed to a wider section of consumers than the rather compact models. In direct competition with these vehicles, sales of the formerly successful VW 1500 did not meet expectations in 1964. Thus, a second important product after the Beetle began to falter. In order to improve competitiveness, Volkswagen examined the possibilities of cooperative ventures with Daimler-Benz. The reorganization undertaken in 1964 left the Wolfsburg automobile manufacturer the production of vehicles under 2 liters. Volkswagen used the opportunity to officially acquire 75,3 percent of the Daimler-Benz subsidiary Auto Union GmbH in January 1, 1965. The plant's assets included a yearly capacity of 100,000 vehicles, 11,000 employees, a sales network with 1,200 dealerships and a new generation of engines. On the debit side, however, were large stockpiles of vehicles and a substantial financial crisis. This was due to the fact that Auto Union GmbH built a comparatively low quality, but nevertheless expensive vehicle, which was consequently difficult to sell. Organizational changes and a rethinking of the product were immediately necessary in order to get Volkswagen's newest subsidiary out of the red. Starting in September, the plant in Ingolstadt produced the “Audi 72”, which designers quickly refashioned out of the DKW F 102. This measure did not lead to an immediate financial breakthrough, but the vehicle remained the central model of a range with which Auto Union ensured its status as an independent brand within the Volkswagen Group. With reduced earnings, Volkswagen entered the first postwar recession in 1966/1967, which ended an exceptional and unusually long phase of prosperity, heralding the return to normal economic conditions. The declining demand on the domestic market forced the company to reduce the number of vehicles manufactured in 1967: The production of the Beetle was cut by 14 percent and the VW 1500 was decreased 35 percent. Although the economy as well as Volkswagen's sales figures improved by the end of the year, the short sales crisis had a lasting impact on Volkswagen. It demonstrated the economic susceptibility of large-scale standard production, which, at the same time, came under pressure by internal changes in production and in model policies. The production depth as well as the variety of models with many different features built up by the company over the previous years led to a decrease in productivity and reduced the company's efficiency. Volkswagen's main competitive advantage – the mass production of one model – now threatened to become an ominous disadvantage. The degree of motorization and greater competition on most important markets cut off the possibility of compensating for losses by increasing sales to the same extent or by raising prices. It was during this period of radical change that the Heinrich Nordhoff era ended. He held firmly onto the Volkswagen saloon, which during his leadership was perfected into the technically mature Beetle, as well as on the combination of mass production and the global market orientation, leading the Volkswagenwerk to the pinnacle of the European automobile industry. In order to maintain this position far-reaching changes were necessary after Nordhoff’s death, who had been Chairman for 20 years. In order to improve yields, Volkswagen introduced a number of cost cutting measures in 1968. Along with the rationalization of production, the company invested in expanding research and development, redefining their importance. The recruitment of technicians and engineers as well as the systematic training of executive talents were now given greater emphasis. With the start of production of the VW 411 in September 1968, the © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 1 / 36 Wolfsburg automobile manufacturer continued to move away from its dependency on the Beetle. However, with its daily production of 4,200 units, it still remained the lifeblood of the company. In order to maintain its competitiveness, Volkswagen developed the VW 1302 featuring a new chassis and twice as much trunk space and which went into standard production as a sedan and convertible in 1970. Not all efforts could, however, change the fact that the Type 1, which featured an air-cooled rear engine, lost its attractiveness. A new generation of small and mid-sized vehicles with water-cooled engines, front-wheel drive, larger interior and trunk space, as well as new styling conquered the market. Sales of the Beetle dropped in 1970, but the losses were made up by the success of the South American subsidiary as well as by the recently merged Audi NSU Auto Union AG, whose models served an increasingly growing market segment. Volkswagen now concentrated its activities on the important task of developing a new range of products and designing a worthy successor to the Beetle. Decreasing domestic demand was followed by sales problems abroad, intensified by the move to flexible exchange rates. The revaluation of the Deutschmark in the early 1970s impacted on Volkswagen exports and led to stronger competition from foreign automakers on the domestic market as demand fell. Volkswagen responded to changes in exchange rate policy by increasing prices because higher production costs and lower yields left little leeway for any other course of action. As a result, prices relative to other automakers and the company's competitive position on key volume markets worsened. This applied in particular with regard to Volkswagen’s exports to the United States, the main export market, where Volkswagen of America’s profits and sales were curtailed by exchange-rate induced cost handicaps compared with Japanese and American automakers. Between 1970 and 1972, Volkswagen of America's sales dropped from about 570,000 vehicles to just under 486,000. To make matters worse, the Beetle's popularity among Americans began to decline as the model started lagging behind automobil progress in terms of drive technology, consumption and safety. Volkswagen confronted this crisis with a combination of cost cuting measures and high investments in product development and manufacturing. At its core, the costly rationalization program was aimed at implementing new technical and organizational methods in the production process. Computer technology would provide most of the innovation. Electronic data processing could now manage production processes, greatly improving rationalization. Volkswagen put all the essential elements of successful crisis management into place. All hopes now rested on the shoulders of a new generation of Volkswagens. 1961 January The partial privatization of Volkswagen results in a new “people’s stock” in the Federal Republic of Germany. By March 15 of this year, Volkswagen stocks with a total face value of 360 million DM are sold for 350 DM each. The proceeds from the sale are transferred to “Stiftung Volkswagen”, set up in 1961 to promote scientific research with independent legal statutes under civil law and registered in Hanover. Activities are financed by interest on the capital of the Foundation and the annual dividends from the Volkswagen shares held by the Federal government and the State of Lower Saxony. 1961 Permanent pioneer: 32 years before the German Reichstag was wrapped, the Beetle is already packaged up. This car is destined for the USA. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 2 / 36 1961 Volkswagen has a strong presence with its comprehensive Transporter program and industrial engine range at “Der Rote Hahn”, the international exhibition for rescue, fire prevention, disaster relief, safety and security, in Cologne. Versions of the Transporter specially designed to meet the needs of firefighters, rescue services and disaster relief prove eminently practical and soon become a familiar sight. 1961 September At the International Automobile Show in Frankfurt Volkswagen launches the VW 1500. By introducing this model, the Volkswagen Board attempts to reduce the company’s dependence on the Beetle. Two versions go into production: the sedan in September 1961, and the Variant in February 1962. 1961 October 18 The most complicated civil case in the history of the Federal Republic of Germany ends after 12 years in a settlement between Volkswagen and the former KdF-savers. The latter went to court to demand the delivery of Volkswagen automobiles in accordance with the deals made with the German Labor Front. Depending on the sum saved, the savers receive a maximum discount of 600 DM on the listed price for the purchase of a Volkswagen automobile or a cash settlement of up to 100 DM. 1961 The thousandth vehicle exported to Paraguay marks an excellent achievement by Volkswagenwerk AG on an export market with a population of 1.5 million. 1961 At 1:55 p.m., the five millionth Volkswagen built since 1945 leaves the final assembly line in Hall 12. Volkswagen is the first European car maker to achieve such a success. The pearl white anniversary vehicle decorated with colorful chrysanthemums is officially presented to the International Red Cross in Geneva at a ceremony. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 3 / 36 1961 At the last works meeting of the year, Chairman Heinrich Nordhoff looks back on a successful year, highlighting achievements such as the 40-hour week, the six percent profit-sharing bonus, the symbolic “people’s” share in the company, the special bonus for the five millionth vehicle and the Christmas bonus on a par with the previous year: “Unilateral solutions come easy, but combining a commitment to social responsibility with a competitive approach and building the biggest, best and most efficient car making factory on the European Continent without using other people’s money – that is something that did not exist before the Volkswagenwerk, that is our Volkswagenwerk and there is nothing else quite like it.” 1961 The new three-storey laboratory building houses the acoustic lab as well as the chemical analysis facilities and the electrotechnical measuring and material testing department plus workshops. 1961 4,896 Volkswagen Service stations in Europe: a tight knit network of workshops helps customers with defective shock absorbers or punctured tires. No car is immune to those kinds of problems: “Niemand ist vollkommen.” (“Nobody’s perfect”) – not even when Beetle quality is checked by 7,308 inspectors during the production process. A witty and honest plea for the reliability of the customer-friendly Volkswagen Service. 1961 The “Volkswagen Station Wagon” was purchased by 23,300 customers on the American market in 1961. At that time, this represented approximately one seventh of Beetle sales. “Volkswagen Station Wagon” sales rose steadily during the 1960s, reaching 65,000 in 1970. When the last units were sold in the United States in 1993, over 940,000 “Volkswagen Station Wagon” in all its shapes and forms had been delivered to customers – a proud achievement after 43 years. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 4 / 36 1961 Volkswagen commercial “Gebrauchtwagen” (used cars) do not just attract the attention of moviegoers. 1962 Production of the “Variant”, the station wagon version of the exclusively two-door Type 3, begins in February 1962 and sales of 20,338 units in the model’s first year already account for 20 percent of the VW 1500 sedan sales figures. With cargo space of 1,200 liters located over the 45 or 54 hp rear engine, the vehicle is popular with families and is also ideal for transport or delivery purposes. Even today, Volkswagen’s successful models that epitomize the functional use of space are still called “Variant”. 1962 The cockpit of the VW 1500 Variant is an excellent illustration of the contemporary simplicity and pragmatic design of control instruments. 1962 January The wall erected between East and West Germany in August 1961 resulted in an end of workers commuting from the German Democratic Republic. Volkswagen starts to employ foreign “guest workers”, mainly from Italy, in order to meet labor needs. The number of foreign workers rose spectacularly in 1962 from 730 to 4,494. By the end of the year, 3,188 Italians are employed in the Wolfsburg plant, living in the “Italian Village” erected especially for them. 1962 The Type 3, available as a sedan or Variant, expands the Volkswagen model range in the lower mid-class. The two-door vehicle with an air-cooled 4-cylinder boxer engine has a much more spacious interior than the Beetle and has the lines of a classic sedan in contrast to the Beetle design. A total of 127,421 VW 1500 are built in Wolfsburg in 1962. 1962 Bremen is an important port for Volkswagen exports. Depending on the country of destination, models built in Germany are also exported from Hamburg, Bremerhaven and Lübeck. 1962 As part of the German development aid scheme, Volkswagen delivers twelve sedans built in Wolfsburg to be used by the postal services in Tongo. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 5 / 36 1962 October 2 The one-millionth Volkswagen Transporter rolls off the assembly line in the Hanover plant. 1962 December 20 Volkswagen increases its involvement in the housing market by establishing the “VW-Siedlungsgesellschaft m.b.H.” (VW Settlement Property Company) with main offices in Wolfsburg in order to take advantage of any opportunities that might come up to build or acquire housing for the workforce. In 1962, Volkswagen invests about 40 million DM in housing projects, 15 million DM of which is for accommodation near the Berlin Bridge in Wolfsburg. Although the housing offered by the company cannot keep up with the growing workforce, it does help to hold on to workers for the domestic plants and keep labor turnover to a minimum. The non-profit housing company limits its own building activities in 1964 in favor of administering construction projects of the Settlement Property Company, whose capital is doubled to 20 million DM. At this time, the two companies own a total of 7,646 apartments in Wolfsburg, Hanover and Kassel. 1962 UNICEF receives mobile assistance for its work in the form of the one millionth Transporter, which is officially presented to the United Nations Children’s Fund in Paris. 1962 Producing vehicle components such as wheel rims was still heavy manual work. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 6 / 36 1962 “5 Millionen Volkswagen” (“5 million Volkswagens”) New production record at Volkswagenwerk AG: 5 million Volkswagen in only 16 years. The two tables framing the VW trademark document the incredible pace of growth. These columns listing “VW production” and “VW exports” bring home the company’s successful journey to the reader as well as pointing the way to the future. 1962 “Es gibt Formen, die man nicht verbessern kann.“ (“Some shapes are hard to improve on.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Director: Paul Wollman Texters: David Herzbrun, Claus Harden Photographer: Charles Wilp The second advertisement designed by DDB in Germany appeared at a time when Beetle sales in Germany were coming under pressure from models by competitors which were comparable in price and size and promised the same efficiency and quality. 1963 January After expanding its distribution functions to the State of Victoria, the Australian sales company “Volkswagen (W. A.) Pty. Ltd.” is renamed “Volkswagen (Sales) Pty. Ltd.”, and the “Volkswagen Distributors Pty. Ltd.” is renamed “Volkswagen (Services) Pty. Ltd.” During the current year, Volkswagen Australasia tries to augment exports to Southeast Asian and South Pacific countries. 1963 January 15 The Volkswagen transportation ship “Johann Schulte” leaves the shipyard. With a loading capacity of 1,750 Volkswagens and a speed of 17.25 knots, the ship, the largest and fastest ever built for Volkswagen, expands the desperately needed transport capacity for overseas exports. 1963 Special versions of the Volkswagen Transporter work wonders with space. The Hanover plant can design a vehicle to suit every need. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 7 / 36 1963 Volkswagen began its exports to the United Kingdom by shipping 900 vehicles in 1953; only ten years later, on June 18, the one hundred thousandth vehicle – a red VW 1500 – was delivered. 1963 Volkswagen responded to the challenge of ever-growing overseas exports by purchasing its own ships. In 1963, 430,366 finished new cars and 41,784 SKD or CKD sedans and Transporter were shipped. An additional 72,617 CKD kits were also dispatched by sea. 1963 April Because of the increasing production of the Beetle and a chronic labor shortage in Wolfsburg, it becomes necessary to streamline and automate production. The Wolfsburg plant automates the assembly of the body-in-white by introducing a new 180-meter long assembly line, which can produce 3,300 units a day in two shifts. The new machinery, which took one year to install, manages 16 different operations. For example, the front and rear sections of the vehicle can be welded to the roof with 300 spot welds and millimeter accuracy. The 440 workers previously needed to carry out these tasks can now help increase capacity levels in other production areas. In order to supply the assembly line with enough body parts, 57 new presses are set up. The paint shop is modernized and expanded by adding two new lines. At the end of December 1963, 43,722 employees work at the Wolfsburg plant. 1963 Volkswagen general importers and dealers use the invitation to Wolfsburg to learn about the latest product and marketing strategies at internal seminars and information events. Apart from the business side of these visits, a cultural program gives the guests the opportunity to find out more about Wolfsburg and its surroundings. After the Berlin Wall went up, the inner German border not far from Wolfsburg is one of the most popular destinations. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 8 / 36 1963 The VW 1500 even cuts a good figure in plexiglass! 1963 Fifteen years after entering the Swedish market, the new Volkswagen Center opens in Södertälje. While the Swedish general importer AB Scania-Vabis only imported 7 Volkswagen in 1948, the figure rises to 43,391 new cars in 1963. The modern Volkswagen Center designed by the architect Anders Berg is officially opened in the presence of Heinrich Nordhoff and Wilhelm Karmann on September 28, 1963. 1963 “DM 3,50 das Pfund.” (“$1.02 a pound.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Director: Paul Wollman Texters: Claus Harden, Jane Talcot Photographer: Harold Krieger The original headline captures the value for money performance of the export sedan. The creative minds at the agency had the courage to advertise the Beetle as if it were tomatoes on a market stall or meat at the butchers. This originality attracted the attention of many readers and brought humorous letters such as: “Please send me one quarter of a pound of Volkswagen. I have enclosed 80 Pfennig in postage stamps.” 1963 “Der VW läuft und läuft und ...” (“ Why do we sell so many Volkswagen?: The VW goes and goes and goes”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Director: Paul Wollman Texters: David Herzbrun, Claus Harden Photographer: Charles Wilp One of the early advertisements in the German Beetle campaign, remembered by many because the headline became a popular saying. The series of photos underscores the headline: reminiscent of a film the storyboard presents the reliability of the Beetle, which “runs and runs and runs..............” on its journey into the horizon. 1963 As this commercial shows, New York is crazy about the Beetle, too. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 9 / 36 1963 In this commercial the Beetle is a familiar figure in the country of the Aztecs. 1964 January 15 The establishment of “Volkswagen de México, S.A. de C.V.” in Mexico City marks Volkswagen’s changeover from assembly to production after new import regulations made importing vehicles increasingly difficult. The new Volkswagen subsidiary acquires “Promexa S.A.”, the former Volkswagen representative in Mexico, and now produces Volkswagens. In 1965, sales increase by 59 percent. In order to meet growing demand, a new production site is established in Puebla. It goes into operation in November 1967, utilizing the products of Mexican suppliers in accordance with government quotas. With 22,220 sold vehicles, Volkswagen de Mexico attains a market share of 21.8 percent in the following year. 1964 The sixth millionth front axle for a Beetle is produced in the Brunswick plant on January 8. The Brunswick plant employs 5,120 people. 1964 The commencement of construction work on the new plant in Emden in early March marks the beginning of Volkswagen’s next step towards optimizing production capacity for overseas exports. For the East Friesland region, the company’s commitment brings a noticeable improvement on the labor market. The unemployment rate falls rapidly by over ten percent as building work begins. 1964 Two VW 1500 S clinch a double victory in the 1300 to 1600 ccm class at the famous Monte Carlo rally. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 10 / 36 1964 At the invitation of the Volkswagenwerk, the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Herbert von Karajan performs for an enthusiastic audience of over 3,000 in the Versuchshalle of the Wolfsburg plant on the evening of April 25. The program includes Symphony Nr. 29 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Richard Strauß’ symphonic poem “Don Juan” and the 6th Symphony by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. 1964 The Volkswagen Karmann Ghia developed in close cooperation with the Osnabrück-based company Wilhelm Karmann GmbH becomes an icon of elegant sportiness. Production of this design classic ceases in 1974 after 485,964 coupes und convertibles have been built. 1964 In the press shop, blanks are turned into pressed parts in several production steps. Several presses set up in long lines produce high-precision large components such as doors, hoods or roofs. Today, modern large-scale presses perform several functions in one machine, replacing entire press lines. 1964 December 8 The plant in Emden, constructed especially for overseas exports, begins producing the Beetle. The manufacturing structure of the new site, which encompasses four halls with 140,000 square meters, is designed with exports for the North American market in mind. The assembly plant receives bodies from Wolfsburg, engines from Hanover, transmissions and frames from Kassel and front axles from Brunswick. Only the seats and wiring harness are produced locally. Over 500 vehicles roll off the assembly line each day. They are shipped from the company’s own port directly to the United States and Canada. By March 1966, the plant expanded its assembly capacity to 1,100 vehicles a day. The workforce grew correspondingly from 790 to 4,487 employees by the end of 1966. At first production was limited to the Beetle and the Transporter, but is expanded with the start of the production of the Golf in June 1974. Production is appropriately diversified. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 11 / 36 1964 December Volkswagen Australasia Pty. Ltd. is required to increase the national production content to 95 percent by 1969. In exchange, the Australian government guarantees duty free imports for the next decade. In order to meet the government’s plans Volkswagen undertakes a reorganization of the Australian branch: Volkswagen (Australasia) Pty. Ltd. is renamed “Volkswagen Australasia Ltd.” in 1964 and takes over the complete production facility of Volkswagen Manufacturing (Australia) Pty. Ltd., which becomes “Volkswagen (Distribution) Pty. Ltd.”. Direct sales to the States of Victoria and West Australia are transferred from “Volkswagen (Sales) Pty. Ltd.”, which was dissolved in 1964, to Volkswagen (Distribution) Pty. Ltd. In spite of all of these efforts, the situation of the Volkswagen’s Australian subsidiary worsens because production costs are high and peak capacity levels are not met. In addition, the automobile does not seem to meet the taste of the general public. By contrast, the comparatively primitive models made by the competitors are designed especially for the Australian market and can be manufactured more cheaply. Volkswagen Australia’s sales drop dramatically by 1966 from 34,588 to 19,586 vehicles. Continuing losses and volume competition, especially from Japanese manufacturers who have an advantageous position on the Australian market thanks to intensive bilateral trade relations, forces Volkswagen to stop its production in 1968. Volkswagen Australasia is renamed “Motor Producers Ltd.” and returns to assembling CKD (completely knocked down) automobiles from imported kits. 1964 “Wie lange werden wir die Linie halten?” (“How much longer can we hand you this line?”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Directors: Helmut Krone, Paul Wollman Texters: Bob Levenson, Claus Harden 1964’s best-seller of the year (just under 950,000 vehicles) faces up to the widespread public discussion on a successor with this ad. Continuous improvements and technical developments are Volkswagenwerk AG’s answer. But the Beetle’s inimitable line remains its recipe for success. 1964 “Ein Volkswagen. Ganz klar.” (“A Volkswagen, oviously.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Directors: Helmut Krone, Paul Wollman Texters: Bob Levenson, David Herzbrun Photographer: Wingate Paine Award: Art Directors Club Deutschland 1965 A Volkswagen in the snow – a never-ending story, not just in the snow plough ad. Arctic temperatures, storms, blizzards or icy roads – the Beetle and its air-cooled rear engine master them all: “On the road in all weathers.” © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 12 / 36 1964 The VW 1500, the Beetle’s big brother, is also a match for any mountain pass. 1964 If there is no snow plough, the Beetle battles its own way through the cold and snow. 1964 From chassis, engine and body – Volkswagen is an excellent alternative. 1965 January 1 The Daimler-Benz subsidiary “Auto Union GmbH” in Ingolstadt is taken over by Volkswagenwerk AG, which acquires the company’s capital in accordance with their agreement in installments. By assuming ownership of this traditional and innovative brand, the Volkswagen Group widens its production range. At the same time, Volkswagen also gains access to a new generation of engines. The Audi, based on the DKW F 102 and produced since September 1965, is notable for its water-cooled 1.7-liter turbo injection engine, front-wheel drive, a modern chassis and a maximum speed of just under 150 kph. Auto Union GmbH joins the Volkswagen Group as an independent subsidiary and forms the beginning of a group of brands. 1965 February 8 Volkswagen of America, Inc. begins taking over responsibility for sales at the distribution level with a view to cutting distribution costs and exerting a direct influence on distributors. In Jacksonville, Florida, the company establishes “Volkswagen Southeastern Distributor, Inc.”, taking over business from the previous distributor. Four further distributors managed by the US subsidiary have been set up by 1969: “Volkswagen Northeastern Distributor, Inc.” registered in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1966; “Volkswagen North Central Distributor, Inc.” in Deerfield, Illinois, in 1967; “Volkswagen South Atlantic Distributor, Inc.” in Washington D.C. and “Volkswagen South Central Distributor, Inc.” in San Antonio, Texas, in 1969. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 13 / 36 1965 April Volkswagen’s small delivery van Typ 147 developed in cooperation with the Deutsche Bundespost (German Postal Service) goes into production. This vehicle is nicknamed “Fridolin”. 1965 July 12 Volkswagen provides backing for its growing transport sector, which has 1,700 employees and a fleet of 55 ships, by founding the “Wolfsburger Transportgesellschaft m.b.H.” Volkswagen owns 90 percent of the shares and 10 percent belong to the recently founded Volkswagen subsidiary “HOLAD Holding & Administration AG”, an international administrative organization located in Basel. The legal exclusion of the freight business became necessary because of a threatened increase of America’s reasonable import customs, which would lower competitiveness. The “Wolfsburg Transport Company” is especially committed to organizing air and sea transport for Volkswagen. It starts operations early in October 1965 with a staff of 59 employees. By the end of the year, it transports 168,000 Volkswagens overseas via chartered and scheduled ships. 1965 December 14 A modern climatic wind tunnel goes into service in Wolfsburg as a part of an expanding development center, in which engineers and technicians will be involved with basic research and product development. 1965 Apart from “Fridolin”, the German Postal Service also opts for the Volkswagen Transporter specially designed for delivery. Features include a high roof to maximize load compartment volume and an extra large sliding side door for easy loading and unloading. 1965 4,893 parts for the price of 4,485 DM – these few words say it all to impressively document the optimum price-performance ratio of the standard Volkswagen 1200 model. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 14 / 36 1965 Ten years after producing the one millionth Volkswagen, the company reaches the magic production figure of ten million vehicles. The management and 400 invited international journalists watch live from the 42nd IAA in Frankfurt as the historic vehicle leaves the assembly line at the Wolfsburg plant. 1965 An anniversary as a mirror image of the times: although engine technology and vehicle design might still often rely on the tried-and tested, Volkswagen does not close its mind to innovative marketing strategies. Attractive young ladies replace the traditional floral arrangements and lend a touch of glamour to the anniversary vehicle. 1965 Volkswagen’s cult car as a children’s toy. 1965 “Werden wir den Käfer je sterben lassen?” (“Will we ever kill the bug?”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Director: Roy Grace Texter: Claus Harden Photographer: Wingate Paine © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 15 / 36 1965 “Verdienen Sie zu viel, um sich einen Volkswagen zu leisten?” (“Do you earn too much to afford one?”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Director: Roy Grace Texters: Claus Harden, Charles Ewell Photographer: Franz Wagner Award: Art Directors Club Deutschland 1966 In 1977, Helmut Schmitz, creative director at DDB, wrote the following about this ad: “At that time, no other car was driven by millionaires as well as “poor” people, by young and old, by blue-collar and white-collar workers, by the self-employed, civil servants and pensioners. By girls, women and ladies of society. A Beetle didn’t brand you. An invaluable advantage that no other car would ever achieve in this form.” 1966 By using advanced measuring technology Volkswagen engineers can pinpoint and analyse potential failings in the design of new vehicles and the further development of current models. These findings are incorporated in production to continually optimize vehicle characteristics. 1966 The “Ruthmannsteiger” Transporter is especially popular with lighting and telecommunication companies as well as energy suppliers. The Transporter with a hydraulic working cage and hydraulic jacking cylinders is ideal for working very high up. 1966 The dip primer coat prepares the vehicle for painting. As endurance tests demonstrate, it also provides effective protection against corrosion and other weathering effects. 1966 The historic achievement of a record one million Transporters for export impressively reflects the enormous success of Volkswagen’s “space wizard”, particularly on the North American market. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 16 / 36 1966 June 29 Josef Rust becomes Chairman of the Volkswagenwerk AG Supervisory Board. 1966 Like its sister models the VW 1600 touring sedan is equipped with the new 12-volt system and driver and passenger head rests are available as an optinal extra from 1967: less storage space in the rear and limited rear visibility are the price of contemporary design. 1966 October “Volkswagen Leasing GmbH”, one of the first German auto leasing companies, is founded in order to win over trade customers by providing customer services and insurance. Volkswagen decides to take this step because leasing companies already sell 10 percent of the new automobiles in the United States. At first, Volkswagen Leasing GmbH gears its activities to the needs of large customers who are increasingly demanding leasing options. 1966 November 21 Volkswagen’s South African subsidiary SAMAD, of which Volkswagenwerk AG owns a 63 percent interest, is renamed “Volkswagen of South Africa Ltd.”. It employs 2,458 people and sells 21,888 vehicles in 1966, an increase of about 21 percent. Its share of the passenger car market rises to 13.4 percent and to 10 percent of light commercial vehicles. In 1974, Volkswagen becomes the sole owner of the South African assembly and sales company. 1966 Improved driving characteristics, more powerful engines, numerous technical innovations and continually optimized safety are among the main changes to the Beetle over the last twenty years or so. The softly rounded lines and the throaty noise of the air-cooled boxer engine, however, remain the Beetle’s trademark. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 17 / 36 1966 “Von den vier meistgekauften Importwagen sind Volkswagen.” ( “Of the four top-selling imports are Volkswagens.”) Successful imports to the United States of America, the world’s largest automobile market: the Beetle, the VW 1600 Variant, the “Station Wagon” and the VW 1600 fastback head the list of imported cars. In 1966, the Beetle even ranked seventh in the US new car registration statistics. Volkswagenwerk AG sold 318,563 Beetle in the USA in 1966 with total sales that year running at 411,956 vehicles. 1966 “Wie Sie Ihre Frau dazu bringen, dieses komische Auto zu mögen.” (“How to get your wife to like this strange car.”) This ad appeals direct to husbands with money to spend on a new car, providing them with good, honest advice on how to use their powers of persuasion with their wives. The everday utility of the VW Variant 1600, the ideal car for the family, just the job for just about every occasion – these are the arguments that tip the scales in favor of husband and wife finding the “right” car. 1966 On country lanes or the “Le Mans” racing circuit – in this commercial the Beetle is a winner on any terrain. 1967 January 1 In accordance with an agreement between Volkswagen and the Metal Workers’ Union, the working day of the regular shift is reduced to 8 hours. All Volkswagen employees now work a 40-hour week with no reduction in pay. 1967 January 2 Volkswagenwerk AG introduces short time working due to the declining demand for automobiles on the domestic market. During the recession of 1966/67, a time when the end of the post war “Wirtschaftswunder” (economic miracle) is announced, the Volkswagen Group suffers its first turnover crisis. Production drops to just under 300,000 automobiles in 1967, and the turnover of vehicles sinks by about 200,000. In order to boost demand, Volkswagen offers a specially priced “money saving Beetle”. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 18 / 36 1967 August Series production of the second-generation Transporter begins at the Hanover plant. With a visibly new face – single panorama windscreen, ten centimeters added to the length of the body, improved road holding and more powerful engines – the workhorse of the economic miracle gathers fresh speed. The Volkswagen Transporter is available as a panel van, mini-bus, high-roof version and as a pickup with a double or standard cab. Volkswagen sells a total of 4.8 million second-generation Transporters until series production is stopped in 1979, that is over three million more than the predecessor model. 1967 The Californain Beetle fan and hobby mechanic Richard J. Smith crossed the USA in his 1958 Beetle converted to run on steam. This Volkswagen “steam machine” was powered by a mixture of gasoline, petroleum and paint thinner. 1967 Ground-breaking progress in accident research at Volkswagen: modern telemetry methods borrowed from the aerospace industry deliver data of previously unknown accuracy and objectivity on how a vehicle behaves in an accident situation. From now on there is in theory no limit to the number of processes occurring in the vehicle that can be recorded, analyzed and compared. The upside to this breakthrough is an enormous increase in knowledge available for evaluation and significant savings in resources. 1967 With its advanced safety steering column, dual circuit braking system, safety rear view mirror and reinforced bumpers, the new Beetle range offers significantly improved vehicle safety. 1967 Volkswagen is smart: for the first time, a computer precisely calculates the optimum gasoline-air mix in the VW 1600 carburettor. 1967 September A series of new technical innovations and design improvements are presented at the IAA in Frankfurt. The VW 1500 offers new driving comfort thanks to its automatic transmission with a hydraulic torque converter, which makes clutchfree operation and multi stage driving ranges possible. The fully automatic version in the 1600 series has a torque converter and a self-activating planetary gear. All Volkswagens now feature energy absorbing safety steering columns, and the automatic vehicles have a double jointed rear axle. A further innovation introduced by Volkswagen is the electronic direct-injection system. This fuel saving device is initially intended only for vehicles manufactured for the United States market. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 19 / 36 1967 One of the most significant technical innovations at Volkswagen in 1967 is the introduction of automatic transmission in the VW 1600 series. The fully automatic version in the 1600 series has a torque converter and a self-activating planetary gear. The forecast that the European automobile market would follow in the footsteps of its US counterpart and increasingly turn to automatic transmission failed to materialize for the time being. 1967 “Mindestens einer von 10 Millionen ...” (“With 34 wives, even a king has to cut a few corners.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Director: Jack Piccolo Texters: Claus Harden, Charles Ewell Photographer: Archive photo Award: Art Diretors Club Deutschland 1967 A king in Kenia: the ad tells the unusual story of tribal chief Njiiri from Kiambu, who travels through the difficult terrain in Kikuyuland in his Beetle, visiting his large family of 34 wives, 80 sons and more than 90 daughters. As the ad says: “His VW never lets him down.” 1967 “Dies ist die neue, revolutionäre Konkurrenz für den Karmann Ghia.” (“This is the new, revolutionary competitor of the Karmann Ghia.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Photo and headline pose a bit of a riddle and create a mood of suspense that catches the reader’s attention: who is the Karmann-Ghia’s competitor? The riddle is solved in the copy text: the answer is the Volkswagen Automatic Karmann-Ghia, a version featuring many technical innovations that significantly improve the driving performance of the sports car. 1968 The new high-roof panel van with its molded plastic roof: the spacious one-tonne vehicle has a 6.2 cubic meter cargo bay, is 4.42 meters long and 1.77 meters wide. The standard high-roof version has a height of 2.29 meters, so the new Transporter offers more than one cubic meter of extra cargo space compared with the standard version of the panel van. 1968 Production of the Country Buggy designed by Volkswagen Australasia and Technical Development at Volkswagenwerk AG begins in the Australian plant at Clayton/Victoria. The Australian subsidiary builds a total of 1,956 units, 887 destined for the Australian market and the rest shipped as CKD kits to other countries in the region. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 20 / 36 1968 May 1 Kurt Lotz, who was Deputy Chairman of the Board of Management since June 1967, succeeds Heinrich Nordhoff. 1968 June 14 Volkswagen and the Metal Workers’ Union sign a rationalization protection agreement, according to which the worker representatives are included in the process of carrying out efficiency measures. 1968 Keeping in touch with the rest of the world thanks to the Volkswagen car radio. Depending on listening preferences there is a choice between the “Wolfsburg” model for medium and long wave reception or the “Emden” for medium and very high frequency reception. 1968 Volkswagenwerk AG recruits its 100,000th employee, Mr. Johannes Rahmenführer, in Wolfsburg on August 16. In 1968 the workforce grows by roughly 13,000 to 104,975 employees. 1968 September The Wolfsburg plant starts producing the VW 411. This partially redesigned model with a modern chassis, unitized body and 68 horsepower marks the end of the Beetle’s technical development, as an air-cooled boxer engine is still in the rear. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 21 / 36 1968 September 19 A proving ground is opened near Ehra-Lessien on the southern edge of the Lüneburg Heath. In its final form, the site features a 100-kilometer long test track with a variety of surfaces and gradients. The Volkswagen Group tests its vehicles here under everyday conditions with the help of modern equipment. A driving simulator is installed in 1970, enabling certain test programs to be carried out safely. Volkswagen increases its staff of qualified employees by hiring engineers and technicians to strengthen research and development activities. 1968 December Because of an approaching merger with the automobile manufacturer Saab, the Swedish truck producer “AB Scania Vabis” decides to transfer Volkswagen’s import and sales dealings to a subsidiary. After considering its options, Volkswagen acquires a one-third interest in “Svenska Volkswagen AB” in Södertälje, thus maintaining access to the dealership network of the authorized Swedish importer. This involvement in conjunction with a 10-year consortium contract, serves to protect Volkswagen against its direct competitor, Saab. Starting on January 1, 1969, Svenska Volkswagen AB assumes responsibility for the sales of Volkswagen and Porsche vehicles on the Swedish market. During the following year, it acquires “Volkswagen i Stockholm AB”, which ran retail business in the Stockholm area. A company strategy is already recognizable here: control of the sales of the Group’s production on the distribution level in all major European markets. On January 1, 2002, Volkswagen becomes the sole owner of Svenska Volkswagen, thus strengthening the company’s position in Scandinavia’s largest automobile market. (Photo: © Scania CV AB (publ)) 1968 “Herbie” – the legendary Beetle bearing the number 53 – soon establishes itself as the most popular car in movie history. The cult Beetle starred in four Hollywood productions by 1980. Following a creative break of just under 25 years, “Herbie Fully Loaded” makes a comeback to the screen in 2005. “Der Große aus Wolfsburg.” (“The big one from Wolfsburg.”) Big publicity for a big car: the VW 411 is presented in all its glory on a double-page spread – a superlative car from Wolfsburg. The copy lists the VW 411’s record-breaking achievements and concludes: “Some things are quite simply the best.” © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 22 / 36 1968 “Zehn Ereignisse, die Automobilgeschichte geschrieben haben.” (“Ten events that made automotive history.”) A journey through 123 years of automobile history from the invention of the pneumatic tire to computer-controlled direct injection. The last three milestones document Volkswagen’s achievements: series production of the Volkswagen sedan which began in Wolfsburg in December 1945, the introduction of series automatic transmission in 1967and the innovative electronic direct injection system that wrote history in 1968. 1968 1969 August 26 “Auto Union GmbH” and “NSU Motorenwerke AG” join forces to form “Audi NSU Auto Union AG”. Volkswagen owns 59.5 percent of the shares. Because of the new company’s broad program as well as the proven success of the Audi models, it stood to reason that the company should set up its own independent sales organization. Competition between brands stimulated the development of new vehicles, but parallel sales organizations did not prove effective. For this reason, the parent company took over responsibility for the sale of Audi NSU vehicles in May 1974, and later for acquisition, vehicle stock, and parts sales. Audi NSU Auto Union AG is renamed “Audi AG” on January 1, 1985 and the company’s headquarters moves from Neckarsulm to Ingolstadt. 1969 Throwing convention to the winds! The Beetle and Transporter are the cult vehicles of the flower-power generation. 1969 September 1 In order to systematically build up a staff of qualified management employees, Volkswagen opens the training center “Haus Rhode”. While Volkswagen plays a leading role in professional training, there are many gaps in the area of training for current and future managers. Trainee positions, which were previously rare, as well as training seminars and © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 23 / 36 information symposia, are reorganized into a new educational system, in which managers are trained in leadership abilities, teamwork and coordination. The seminars also serve to develop a unified management style. These measures are continuously expanded during the following years. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 24 / 36 1969 In the 1960s Americans loved the opportunity to collect their new car in person while on a trip to Germany. Today, a visit to the Autostadt and a tour of the factory make a stay in Wolfsburg a very special experience. 1969 October The Kurierwagen (courier vehicle), commissioned by the Bundeswehr (German army), goes into production. The VW 181 is the first cross-country vehicle for the general public that receives widespread attention. Over 80 percent of the entire production is put to civilian use. 1969 Taking eastern Lower Saxony as the geographic center with the plants in Wolfsburg, Brunswick and Hanover – soon to be followed by Salzgitter – Volkswagen’s decentralized production structure in Germany stretches from Ingolstadt to Emden. 1969 November 115,646 VW Porsche 914, a cooperative venture between the two car manufacturers soon to become known as the “Volksporsche” (People’s Porsche), leave the assembly line between 1969 and 1975. The two-seater, available with either a four- or six-cylinder boxer engine, has a power output of between 80 and 110 hp. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 25 / 36 1969 Volkswagen intensifies its efforts to recruit employees from abroad in order to meet demand for labor. The share of such workers in the Volkswagenwerk AG workforce rises from 7.6 to 8.9 percent during 1969. Of the 10,006 foreign employees, the largest group comes from Italy (6,176), followed by employes of Greek, Spanish and Turkish nationality. 1969 December Because of increasing competition in the United States, Volkswagen expands the sales basis for the Group’s products. A second independent sales organization is founded for Audi and Porsche vehicles, which, by the end of the year, encompasses 104 dealerships. 1969 December Volkswagen halts the expansion of the research and development department for the time being. Its tasks include the further improvement of current models and their components as well as the design of new vehicles and powertrains. Special emphasis is given to researching safety features and the reduction of exhaust emissions for which the engineers and technicians utilized modern measuring and test equipment. By using methods of gas dynamics combustion is improved in order to enhance conventional powertrains. Computer controlled simulators realistically replicate motion on and in the vehicle. For the first time climate and altitude chambers are used to help test the safety of the vehicle under different environmental conditions. 1969 “Da weiß man, was man hat.” (“What you don’t see is what you get.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Director: Richard Baistrow Texter: Werner Butter Photographer: Peter Möschlin Award: Art Diretors Club Deutschland 1970 Helmut Schmitz, the creative mind behind the Beetle campaign, said of this ad: “A typical example of a statement that wouldn’t work for many other products. Very few products have such a strong quality image that you can get away with a headline like “You won’t get taken for a ride”. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 26 / 36 1969 “Das liebt die Welt an Deutschland.” (“What the world loves about Germany.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Director: Richard Baistrow Texter: Werner Butter Photographer: H. Klocke Award: Art Diretors Club Deutschland 1969 In this ad, the export best-seller from Volkswagen is an ambassador of German culture abroad along with Cologne Cathedral, the cuckoo clock and the dachshund. The Beetle is a symbol of German culture embodying the virtues of “Made in Germany” and is perceived and purchased in the farthest-flung corners of the globe because it is “typically German.” 1969 Commercial “Käfer Killer” (“Beetle killer.”) The message: “There’s life in the old dog yet!” 1970 March With the takeover of Selbstfahrer-Union, Germany’s largest automobile rental agency, the Volkswagen Group increases its involvement in this promising field. Renamed “interRent Autovermietung GmbH”, the subsidiary merges in 1988 with Europcar and is renamed “Europcar International S.A.”. Volkswagen owns a 50 percent interest in the company located in Boulogne-Billancourt, which operates in eight countries and has its own fleet of 40,000 vehicles. On January 1, 2000, Volkswagen assumes 100 percent ownership of Europcar group. 1970 Another memorable anniversary: on April 24, 1972 Volkswagen celebrated the completion of the 600,000th vehicle for the Dutch market. Beetle sedan exports to neighbouring Holland began 23 years earlier, in October 1947, marking the beginning of global export success for Volkswagen. 1970 The Buggy – the automotive expression of contemporary leisure. Carefree and unconventional, hinting at a lifestyle originating on the US West Coast and soon to hit Germany, too. The Californian way of life epitomized by the music of the Beach Boys finds its automobile soul mate in the design and engineering of the Buggy. The vehicle has a glass fiber reinforced plastic body mounted on a shortened Type 1 chassis and powered by a four-stroke rear-mounted boxer engine and comes in bright colors such as blood orange, Irish green and lemon yellow. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 27 / 36 1970 The two millionth Volkswagen Type 3, a VW 1600 hatchback sedan, leaves the assembly line in Wolfsburg on June 16, 1970. The anniversary vehicle was destined for export to the UK. Volkswagen built a total of 2,587,989 Type 3 units from start of production in 1961 to the model change in 1973. 1970 July Series start up of the K 70 marks the start of operations at the new Salzgitter plant. The drive unit for the new Volkswagen is manufactured by engine construction in shed 1 which involves more than 2,000 of the total workforce of 5,108 employees at the end of 1970. The new plant site, built for K 70 production, is linked to the long-term aim of transferring engine construction from Hanover in order to increase manufactoring capacities for the Transporter. From January 1971 Salzgitter produces the engines for the Audi 100 leaving Auto Union free to gain additional capacities in order to exploit current market opportunities. By the end of the year, the workforce in Salzgitter has grown to 8,000. The crisis in the Volkswagenwerk and the onset of the worldwide recession in 1974/75 brings car-manufacturing in Salzgitter to an end in September 1975. This site had taken on the assembly of the VW 411 in 1971 and a part of the assembly of the Passat in 1973. In total the site produces more than 400,000 vehicles, of which the K 70 model represents 210,891 alone. In 1975 engine production reaches almost 3,800 units per day. In the future the Salzgitter site proves to be the most important location for engine construction within the Volkswagen Group. 1970 The K 70 notchback marks Volkswagen’s debut in water-cooled engines. The sedan developed by NSU is available as part of the Volkswagen brand program in two versions with a 1.6 liter engine and either 75 or 90 hp or a 1.8 liter engine with 100 hp. The interim model, of which 210,891 units were produced between 1970 and 1975, heralds the advent of a new generation of models including the Passat from 1973, the Golf from 1974 and the Polo from 1975. 1970 Most Volkswagen leave the plant by rail – both in 1970 and today. Thousands of vehicles leave the loading station in Wolfsburg every day, heading for various destinations. 1970 To begin with, production is dominated by the K 70. In 1971 VW 411 assembly is added, followed by part of the assembly of the Passat in 1973. In total the site produces more than 400,000 vehicles, over half of them K 70. The worldwide recession and overcapacity force the closure of vehicle assembly in September 1975. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 28 / 36 1970 The Volkswagen medical center at the Wolfsburg plant always keeps up-to-date on medical developments. An expert team of doctors and assistants looks after the workforce, providing anything from preventive healthcare to emergency first aid and rehabilitation measures. 1970 At around 8 a.m. a major fire breaks out at Volkswagen’s Brazilian site in São Bernardo do Campo. The fire destroys a production hall including a paint shop as well as extensive stocks. As a result of the damage daily production is more than halved until reconstruction is complete. 1970 “Der Wagen, der das Angenehme ...” (“The car that combines the appeal of a luxury saloon …”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Creative Director: Helmut Schmitz Art Director: C. Rainer Texter: L. Nagel Photographer: Th. Meyer A new layout for the VW 411 LE ad: the three columns of copy take up the top quarter and the headline in proverb style fills the left-hand middle section of the double page. The star of the ad is the VW 411, which is presented with all the features of a luxury sedan such as comfortable seats, draught-free air circulation, height-adjustable front seats and auxiliary heating. 1970 “Er ist da. VW K 70.” (“It’s here. VW K 70.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Creative Director: Helmut Schmitz Art Director: J. Hugendubel Texter: Werner Butter Photographers: Th. Meyer, B. Stuart Expectations were high pre-market launch of the VW K 70: in September 1969, SPIEGEL called the K 70 “a mysterious super car that has fueled the fantasy of testers for many a year.” One year later the international motor press test drove the K 70 in the French city of Port Grimaud. This ad coincided with the launch of the VW K 70 in Germany in October 1970. The striking headline of “It’s here!” responded to the public mood and showed that Volkswagen was on the ball. 1971 January 6 By means of a capital investment, Volkswagenwerk AG acquires a 75 percent share of “Volkswagen Bruxelles SA.” which was founded on December 31, 1970. The company is responsible for imports to Belgium and runs the assembly plant built by the authorized importer, which has a capacity of 400 vehicles a day. Volkswagen Bruxelles becomes a 100 percent subsidiary of Volkswagenwerk AG at the end of 1975. When Audi © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 29 / 36 assumes responsibility for production at the Brussels plant, the name of the company is changed to “Audi Brussels S.A/N.V.” on May 30, 2007. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 30 / 36 1971 Three years after planning had commenced, the Research and Development Division moves into the newly-completed high-rise building which has since become a landmark on the company’s site in Wolfsburg. 1971 Volkswagen Beetle-cum-Transporter – two-in-one: Volkswagen’s unmistakable duo for over twenty years. 1971 October 1 Rudolf Leiding, former President of Volkswagen do Brasil and Board Chairman of Audi NSU Auto Union AG, assumes the chairmanship of Volkswagen’s Board of Management. 1971 Volkswagen vehicles already set an example on land – Lufthansa follows suit in the air, spreading the name of Wolfsburg all over the world by christening one of its passenger aircraft by the same name. 1971 All Volkswagen customers can arrange for their vehicles to be given a thorough check-up. Trained mechanics at all Volkswagen service stations can compile an individual diagnosis for any Volkswagen with the help of 50 individual tests. Exhaustive service checks with the findings detailed in a service report give customers an excellent idea of the functional reliability and safety of their cars. Customers are given an estimate of the cost and can arrange when to take their car in for repair based on the urgency of the work 1971 Once homologation of two-door vehicles for use as taxis in Mexico had been issued, the first 1,000 Volkswagen Beetle arrive in Mexico City ready for service in December. More than 80,000 Beetles are already used as taxis in the Brazilian cities of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, and the rounded silhouette of the “escarabajo”, as the Beetle is called in Mexico, soon becomes a familiar sight on the roads in the capital. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 31 / 36 1971 December Data processing arrives in the fields of car technology and service. All Volkswagen models can now be checked for functional and operational reliability with the help of computer diagnosis. Along with the introduction of a central plug for computer testing, Volkswagen’s service workshops are gradually equipped with computers. Data processing also provides research and development and activities with new initiatives, for example the use of an automatic scanning device in the design of body shells. Large computers and plotters make possible a significant reduction in the time necessary for the development of new bodies.. 1971 “Das Kraft-Ei.” (“This egg packs a punch.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Creative Director: Helmut Schmitz Art Director: Erwin Schmidt Texter: Reinhold Scheer Photographer: Erwin Schmidt “Es gibt Formen, die man nicht verbessern kann.” (“Some shapes are hard to improve on.”) is the headline of the famous Beetle ad from 1962 which provided the inspiration for the motive used for the VW 1302 S. This latest “Kraft-Ei” (power egg) is bulkier and more rounded than its predecessor, a testimony to technological progress: 50 hp, a top speed of 130 kilometers per hour, semi-trailing arm rear suspension and MacPherson strut suspension at the front. 1971 “Der Käfer, der 13 Millionen überholt.” (“The Beetle that overtakes 13 million Beetles.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Creative Director: Helmut Schmitz Art Director: Richard Bairstow Texter: G. Simon Photographer: Peter Möschlin This ad tells the story of the Beetle’s constant technological development: the new models are in the fast lane thanks to a 50 hp engine, MacPherson suspension at the front and semi-trailing arm rear suspension. The tighter turning circle, 260 liters of cargo space and 37 further improvements are strong arguments in favor of the million-selling model. The storyboard uses a cinematic presentation to convey its message: the VW 1302 and VW 1302 S relentlessly overtake their predecessor which is in itself by no means an automotive nobody, but in fact the Volkswagen sedan which has already found 13 million owners and will continue to inspire new customers. 1972 Director Rudolf Zehetgruber creates the DUDU movies, the German pendant to Hollywood’s successful super-Beetle Herbie. The appealing all-rounder and his friend and owner Jimmy Bondi star in a total of five productions: “Ein Käfer geht aufs Ganze” (1971), “Ein Käfer gibt Vollgas” (1972), “Ein Käfer auf Extratour” (1973), “Das verrückteste Auto der Welt” (1975) and “Zwei tolle Käfer räumen auf” (1978). © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 32 / 36 1972 On February 4, 1972, “Bild” newspaper publishes an article headlined “Beetle takes over at the top” in its “news of the day” section, referring to the upcoming production record at Volkswagenwerk AG. 1972 February 17 With 15,007,034 units produced, the Beetle breaks the record of the legendary “Tin Lizzy”, the Ford Motor Company’s Model-T built from 1908 to 1927. The Beetle is the new world champion. 1972 March 8 Volkswagen signs an investment agreement with the Yugoslavian importer UNIS concerning the erection of a local production site. In accordance with this agreement, the joint enterprise “Tvornica Automobila Sarajevo” (TAS), with main offices in Vogosca, is founded on June 14. This new firm signs the investment agreement on August 8. TAS, of which Volkswagenwerk AG holds 49 percent of the capital, initially produces replacement parts and standard production parts for the German automobile manufacturer. After a yearlong construction period, the new plant starts assembling the VW 1200, 1300 and 1303 on November 10, 1973. At first, production capacity is only about 20 vehicles a day. In 1976, the site shifts over to the production of the Golf. After the entire Caddy production moved to Sarajevo, the Yugoslavian company produces for export markets starting in 1982. In the fall of 1985, the second generation of Golf goes into production. In 1988, 3,109 employees produce a total of 28,341 vehicles, of which 15,184 are delivered to Volkswagen AG. On September 28, 1989, the 300,000th Volkswagen, an alpine white Golf, rolls off the assembly line. In 1990, the Yugoslavian company reaches a new production record when it produces 37,411 vehicles. The civil war and declining economic conditions cause a halt in production. Beginning on July 30, 1998, the cooperation between Volkswagen and UNIS is continued with the “Volkswagen Sarajevo, d.o.o.”. The company takes over TAS’s heavily damaged production site and starts producing Škoda vehicles on August 31. In 2002, production of the Golf is added. Various Volkswagen, Audi and Škoda brand models are currently assembled at the plant. 1972 As the first non-US automaker, Volkswagen presents a safety vehicle named the ESVW I (Experimental Safety Volkswagen). It is planned to standardized the safety innovations demonstrated by the vehicle study, including an antilock breaking system and a passive seatbelt system, in a next step and gradually incorporate them in series production. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 33 / 36 1972 June 21 Based on the provisions of the revised law governing industrial relations, a new General Works Council is set up and given expanded rights of co-determination and involvement. Siegfried Ehlers is elected Chairman. 1972 With the “Muli”, Volkswagen plans to offer a simple, low-cost commercial vehicle specially designed for use in developing countries where the road networks are not very well developed. The basic Transporter comprises a flat-paneled body and proven Volkswagen powertrains such as an air-cooled 1.6 liter boxer engine, and can be assembled with a minimum of tools and very little technical knowledge. 1972 The Volkswagen remanufacturing service celebrates the completion of the three millionth remanufactured powertrain at the Kassel plant. Business with remanufactured powertrains accounts for approximately 25 percent of the entire spare parts business. Roughly two-thirds of these powertrains are used in Germany, while the remaining third are destined for Volkswagen service partners all over the world. 1972 Barbra Streisand and Ryan O’Neal star in director Peter Bogdanovich’s screwball comedy “What’s up, Doc?”, but the secret star of the breathtaking chase sequences through the streets of San Francisco is a beautifully decorated wedding Beetle!! 1972 “Der VW-Porsche überholt nicht nur Traditionen.” (“The VW Porsche leaves more than just traditions in the dust.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Art Director: Richard Bairstow Texter: Werner Butter A new version of the fast lane motif. The VW Porsche 914, a cooperative venture from Wolfsburg, Zuffenhausen and Osnabrück, marks a new beginning. For Volkswagenwerk AG and Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, the joint project symbolizes the start of the production and sale of a sports car that is within the budget of broad sections of the population. The VW Porsche 914 © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 34 / 36 with its innovative mid engine concept combines the characteristics of a convertible and a coupé and soon became the best-selling sports car in Germany. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 35 / 36 1972 “Das gibt’s nur einmal.” (“Once in a lifetime.”) Agency: Doyle Dane Bernbach Creative Director: Helmut Schmitz Art Director: Erwin Schmidt Texter: Werner Butter Photographer: Archive This ad is all about price. In 23 years, the price only rose 2 percent or 90 Mark. But the VW 1200 promised much more than just a fixed price. The price-performance ratio had not only remained steady for years and years, it had even improved significantly for the customer: the Beetle had become safer, faster and more comfortable, increasing in perfection, maturity and value as the years passed – the ad passes on this good news to the reader is a conversational and easy manner. 1972 “Weltmeister” (“World champion”) Live from the boxing ring: the Beetle is the world champion in every class. © Volkswagen AG | www.chronik.volkswagenag.com | 30.10.2016 | Seite 36 / 36