http://kalw.org/post/nummi-five-years-later-inside-tesla
NUMMI, five years later: Inside Tesla
[20150602]

[images  / Raja Shah
http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/kalw/files/styles/mobile_story_full/public/201506/unnamed-3.jpg
Tesla's special KUKA robots can do four different tasks

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Tesla did some redecorating when they moved into the plant. They painted the
floors bright white, and they bought lots of red robots

http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/kalw/files/201506/DSC04238_0.JPG
A brand new Tesla Model S rolls down the line

http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/kalw/files/201506/DSC04233.JPG
Tesla hopes to revolutionize the way we drive cars. They are working to
bring the cost of their rechargeable car batteries down to the point where
no one has to rely on gas modes of transportation

http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/kalw/files/201506/DSC04292_0.JPG
Sara Rogers looks through a book of letters kids wrote her after going on
one of her tours. Credit Angela Johnston


audio
http://cpa.ds.npr.org/kalw/audio/2015/06/WEB.NUMMI3_.mp3
]

[Part 3] ... Before Maryo Mendez found that auto shop job at Sears, he
actually dropped his resume off at the building where he used to work. NUMMI
wasn’t there anymore, of course, but there were still cars being made
inside. Electric cars.

Only a few months after NUMMI shut down, Tesla Motors snatched up the space.
The 5.5 million square foot building was valued at $1.3 billion, but because
it was the recession, Tesla bought it for just $42 million. When the rest of
the auto industry was going bankrupt, Tesla began to thrive, and it gave
former NUMMI workers like Mendez a tiny bit of hope.

“I concentrated on (Tesla) first. I got some leads from some people that
were working in there,” Mendez says. But he had no luck. He thinks it was
because of his age.

“They wouldn’t hire anyone over 50, so it was getting even harder to get in
there, even when I had the perfect resume that the unemployment people
helped me make.”

The truth is that when Tesla moved into NUMMI it was still a really small
startup. In 2012, the company was only making five cars a week, and didn’t
need that many employees. But it never released the numbers.

“The company has said informally it’s been hundreds, but what exactly does
that mean? 200 or 500?” says Harley Shaiken, a UC Berkeley professor who
studies labor and the global economy.

“A lot of NUMMI workers who would’ve brought valuable skills, for whatever
reason, didn't wind up at Tesla,” he adds.

Today, Tesla has thousands of employees. They won’t say exactly how many --
or how many used to work at NUMMI. Shaiken says that’s a shame.

“This was one of the most well-known and successful automobile factories in
the world. It pioneered labor management cooperation in important ways in
the United States.”

It was definitely revolutionary. NUMMI prided itself on making cars in an
efficient, productive way. But Tesla says it’s revolutionary too: changing
the future of both auto manufacturing and driving.

Inside the Tesla factory
When I arrive at Tesla, I meet up with communications staffer Alexis
Georgeson, climb into a golf cart, and start zipping around the factory,
watching cars in every stage of the assembly process. First stop is the
aluminum coil yard.

“So Model S starts with a giant roll of  aluminum,” she says. “Each one of
these rolls weighs about 20,000 pounds and they come into the factory, and
then we unroll the sheets.”

At NUMMI, this is how cars would start out too, as giant rolls of metal.
Those large sheets of aluminum are then stamped. Georgeson shows me this,
too.

When Tesla moved in, they did some redecorating. They put in skylights,
painted the floors bright white, and installed living plant walls. Some of
the equipment in the factory came from NUMMI, and if you look closely enough
you can see some remnants of the old line.

Other machines are new to the space. Tesla bought a lot of high tech-robots,
and they’re all painted bright red -- Tesla colors.

Georgeson stops the golf cart to show me robots that can do four different
jobs at once.

Meeting the robots
The robots look lifelike, and they remind me of dinosaurs. As a car rolls
down the line, the robots cock their heads all at once and then dive in
toward the car, quickly screwing in bolts, welding, and drilling. Then they
pull back and wait for the next car.

For the whole first hour of the tour, I was waiting to be introduced to a
worker. I remembered Sara Rogers, the NUMMI tour guide, telling me about
‘Bob’ who puts on tires, ‘Jim’ who puts on the doors.

“Xavier actually lifts Model S right when it’s coming from the paint shop,
and sets it down on the trim line,” Georgeson tells me. And I get my hopes
up.

But when when we finally meet him, I see that Xavier isn’t a person. He’s a
robot, so strong that he can lift two-ton newly-assembled cars high into the
air.

“They're the largest robots in the world,” Georgeson tells me. “They all
have names based on Marvel comic characters, like Wolverine, Iceman,
Thunderbird, Cyclops.”

Apparently Elon Musk, Tesla’s creator, is a huge X-Men fan.

Besides meeting a few of Tesla’s 200 robots, I didn’t meet anyone else on
the tour. But Georgeson says the people are there, just doing different
jobs. You can see evidence: vending machines full of earplugs and goggles,
and popcorn makers stationed around the factory floor. She says these
workers are excited about Tesla. “Because they know that this product that
they're making is really changing the world.”

At the height of NUMMI’s production, they were making more than 400,000 cars
per year. Last year, Tesla built and distributed 33,000. But, they’re
growing. This year they hope to ramp up production to over 55,000, and they
hope the entire electric car industry will grow with them.

A healthy county
Even though Tesla’s vertically integrated -- meaning they make all their
cupholders in house, instead of in outside factories -- their growth has
been good for the county.

“It’s very good, unemployment is down to five percent it's lower than the
state,” says Patti Castro, the director of the Alameda County Workforce
Investment Board.  

“This area produces 30 percent of the state's output in terms of
manufacturing, so it's all good. The sad thing is when I reflect on it, it's
like well, there's fewer people doing it. You have to keep that in
perspective, they don't need as many people, so you always want to know,
‘where people going to work?”

Economist Harley Shaiken has similar thoughts.

“I think that the automobile industry is an advanced industry, it is part of
the 21st century, as Tesla has shown us,” he says.

But, he adds, the NUMMI closure also shows that you can’t always predict
what’s going to work. Conventional wisdom says US auto plants closed because
they couldn’t adapt to the modern world. NUMMI did adapt, but ultimately it
still closed. Shaiken says that points to a bigger structural issue.

“Simply to close a plant like NUMMI, which was so successful for 25 years
and was the symbol of what could be done, to close it for the narrowest the
financial reasons...I think there’s something that's not right about that.”

Packing NUMMI into boxes
At this point, no one is really keeping track of what happened to the NUMMI
workers. There are just anecdotes about where people are.

Sara Rogers, the former NUMMI tour guide, still keeps in touch with a lot of
them. She also keeps her own pieces of NUMMI in big boxes stacked in her
garage. She’s saved every note anyone has ever written her, and little
artifacts from the factory, like a piece of paper that was pinned on the
last car.

Rogers also owns a NUMMI car: a gold Toyota Tacoma.

“I was gonna order a car, I couldn’t wait, I couldn’t wait, so I went out
and I looked at a silver one, and I looked at a gold one,” she says. “And I
got the gold one and of course her name is ‘Goldie.’”

And of course, she knows the car’s exact birthday. If you look on the inside
drivers’ side panel you can see the manufacturing date.

“It was born, it left the company on June 16, 2001 at 9:43 p.m., so I wanted
know who built it,” she says -- so she could go out on the line and thank
them personally.

Jamie Hummer, Jason Mederios, Betty Jones, and Oscar Lemus, to name just a
few.
[© kalw.org]
...
http://kalw.org/post/nummi-five-years-later-family-reunion
Part 1
...
http://kalw.org/post/nummi-five-years-later-picking-pieces
Part 2



http://www.autoevolution.com/news/tesla-motors-12-year-history-told-in-just-two-minutes-video-96143.html
Tesla Motors' 12-Year History, Told in Just Two Minutes - Video
by Tudor Rus  2nd June 2015




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