Bulgakko Heavy Industries
Public | |
Traded as | SSX: BHI |
Industry | transportation equipment manufacturing defence |
Founded | August 25, 1934 |
Headquarters | Antiytia, Anikatia |
Key people | Seok Moo-yeol, President & CEO |
Products | Sangki automobiles, aircraft engines, industrial engines, Gas turbines, power plants |
Revenue | UR$36.8 billion (FY 2014) |
Number of employees | 215,000 |
Website | Bulgakko Heavy Industries |
불가코옿 중공업 Bulgakko Heavy Industries Ltd. (Anikatian: 붉앜옿 중공업) or Bulgakko (Anikatian: 붉앜옿) , is a Anikatian multinational conglomerate headquartered in Antiytia. It is primarily involved in aerospace manufacturing and ground transportation manufacturing, known for its line of Sangki automobiles. Bulgakko's aircraft engines are widely used in both civil aviation (especially airlines) and military aviation. Currently, Bulgakko employs more than 215,000 people worldwide, operates twelve manufacturing plants. It currently makes Sangki brand cars, and its aerospace division makes engines and parts for most of the Anikatian aircraft.
Divisions
Bulgakko has five main divisions:
- The automobile division, Sangki, has been manufacturing and selling automobiles since 1954 and now has over 2,000 dealerships.
- The aerospace division designs and builds aircraft engines and gas turbines for both commercial and defence proposes.
- The Bulgakko Industrial Power Products division manufactures and sells commercial engines, pumps and generators which were formerly under the Sangki-Bulgakko and Bulgakko brands.
- The eco technology division designs, engineers, constructs, maintains and sells nuclear and fossil power plants, robot sweeper, and wind turbines.
- The electronics division, Dietrich Osterhagen Electrics Limited, is a leading designer, developer, and manufacturer of a wide variety of advanced defense electronics and systems.
The company's five divisions all share their technological advancements with one another, which has made Bulgakko a leader in innovation. In particular, they apply a great deal of their aircraft technology to their automotive division, the most notable example being the horizontally-opposed boxer engines used in all modern Sangki automobiles.