Delia Automotive: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 14:31, 8 January 2024
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Public | |
Industry | Automotive |
Founded | 10 October 1956 |
Headquarters | XX, S.R. Ardovia, Ostrozava |
Key people | XX |
Products | Automobiles, commercial vehicles, military vehicles |
Revenue | X billion (2015) |
X million (2015) | |
Number of employees | 22,550 |
Subsidiaries | Delia Watercraft |
Delia Automotive, often shortened to AutoDel, is an Ostrozavan automotive company based in Ardovia, with regional headquarters in other parts of the globe. The Delia manufacturing plant outside of Deva, Valdavia is Belisaria's sixth largest car manufacturing facility by volume producing 721,024 units (cars and CKD kits) in 2017. The company is most notable for its 1300 and 1310 series, which has been manufactured since 1965 in various body styles and is considered Ostrozava's ubiquitous automobile of the 20th century, and one of the most-sold cars in history. Since 1995, Delia has expanded beyond 1300 series production and entered the modern automobile market, notably developing several new models, expanding into international markets, and funding research into hydrogen and electric engines.
History
The Ostrozavan automotive industry had largely been based out of Rheigen, Valdavia, and Litovia before the Second Partisans' War. With the destruction of several key facilities in bombing runs by Hvalish air forces during late 1956, it was decided that several steel processing plants in Ardovia would be consolidated under one administration and set to build tanks in more defensible areas. The plant, located in a rocky outcrop outside of Vandarek in the Șomvor Quadrilateral, would first be designated Delia-15 upon its opening in late 1956, and served as a secret city and factory complex producing Bv.49 and Bv.53 tanks during the remainder of the war. The plant's opening coincided with a renewed Ostro-Merovian air assault, which restored an atmosphere of security among manufacturing in Transkarminia. Following the 1957 Contractual Crisis and Third Worker's Convention, Delia was given an increased autonomy by the Manninger and Beranek administrations, and with peacetime rebuilding efforts underway and manufacturing methods becoming easier, a large domestic automobile market began to emerge.