Native name | ОАО "Метровагонмаш" |
---|---|
Industry | subway cars and rail buses |
Founded | 1897 |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | Worldwide |
Revenue | $748 million[1] (2017) |
$77.8 million[1] (2017) | |
$48 million[1] (2017) | |
Total assets | $706 million[1] (2017) |
Total equity | $356 million[1] (2017) |
Parent | Transmashholding |
Website | www.metrowagonmash.ru |
Metrowagonmash, also Metrovagonmash (Russian: ОАО "Метровагонмаш", romanized: OAO "Metrovagonmash"), is an engineering company in Mytishchi, Russia. Metrowagonmash (MWM) is one of the leading enterprises in Russia operating in the field of transport machine building. It specializes in development, designing and manufacturing of rolling stock for metro systems and railways. Metrowagonmash is part of Transmashholding.[2]
In May 2009 its Mytishchi Machine-building Factory was spun off as a separate truck and armored vehicle manufacturing company.
History
The plant was founded in 1897 (in the village of Big Mytishchi) to manufacture railcars, first for the Russian North Railway. Tramways and snowplows for Moscow have been produced since 1903, electric passenger trains since 1929 and metro-cars since 1934.
During World War II, self-propelled guns, military tractors, tracked vehicles and other military material were produced. The plant was partially evacuated to the Ural region in October 1941. The equipment was back the following year. In 1947, production of dump trucks was started. The company later concentrated on production of subway cars, dump trucks and armored tracked vehicles (e.g. GM chassises). A number of models of Metrovagonmash subway cars have been deployed in nearly every subway (Metro) system of the former Soviet Union, as well as in Budapest, Prague, Sofia and Warsaw.
In 1999, the plant started manufacturing rail buses as well. The plant also manufactured 137 RA2 Multiple Units between 2006 and 2008. Today Metrowagonmash is among the five thousand top enterprises in the country.[3]
On 19 May 2023, Metrowagonmash was sanctioned by the United States Office of Foreign Assets Control. The United States Department of State said that the plant was involved in the production of military equipment, such as components for surface-to-air radar, weapons systems, and armoured tracked vehicles.[4]
List of products
Metrowagonmash is the leading manufacturer of cars for metro systems of large cities of the CIS countries and of several Eastern European states. The enterprise has mastered manufacture of Light Rail cars designed for the lines of the Moscow Metro. Other specific products for the plant are rail buses. These vehicles are relatively new for the domestic railways and are designed for operation on suburban and interregional non-electrified routes.[5]
Rolling stock
As of 2017, Metrowagonmash produces the following models of rolling stock:
- Metro 81-717.2K/714.2K
- Metro 81-725/726/727 "Baltiets"
- Metro 81-765/766/767 "Moskva"
- Metro 81-775/776/777 "Moskva-2020"
- Tram 71-931M "Vityaz"
Gallery
- Moscow Metro, 81-717.6/714.6
- Saint Petersburg Metro, 81-722/723/724
- Moscow Metro, 81-765/766/767
- Budapest metro, 81-717.2K/714.2K
- Russian Railways, RA1 (Model 730)
- Russian Railways, RA1 (Model 731)
- Hungarian Railways, MÁV-6341
- Czech Railways, Class 835
- Russian Railways, DPM
- Moscow Metro, 81-730.05
- Moscow Metro, 81-730.05
- Moscow Metro, 81-7xx (760-like railcar)
See also
References and sources
- 1 2 3 4 5 Error: Unable to display the reference properly. See the documentation for details.
- ↑ "Metrowagonmash". www.metrowagonmash.ru.
- ↑ "History Factory". www.metrowagonmash.ru.
- ↑ "Metro train contract cancelled because of international sanctions". Metro Report International. Sutton: Railway Gazette Group. 25 May 2023. Archived from the original on 26 May 2023. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
- ↑ "Products Factory". www.metrowagonmash.ru.
External links
- Media related to Metrovagonmash at Wikimedia Commons
- Metrovagnmash official website (en, ru)
- MMZ (Mytishchi Machine-building factory) official website (ru)
- Company profile on the Transmashholding website (en, ru)