The à  koda Works (, ) was one of the largest European industrial conglomerates of the 20th century. In 1859, Czech engineer Emil à  koda bought a foundry and machine factory in Plzeà Â, Bohemia, Austria that had been established ten years previously, founding à  koda Works. By World War I, à  koda Works had become the largest arms manufacturer in Austria-Hungary, supplying the Austro-Hungarian army with mountain guns, mortars and machine guns, including the à  koda M1909, and the ships of the Austro-Hungarian navy with heavy guns. After the war and the creation of the First Czechoslovak Republic, the company, previously focusing on the manufacturing of armaments, diversified and became a major manufacturer of locomotives, aircraft, ships, machine tools, steam turbines, equipment for power utilities, among other industrial products.
à  koda Works and their subordinate Czechoslovak architects and engineers also played a major role in the industrialization and modernization of Iran under Reza Shah Pahlavi. They were responsible for designing and constructing a wide range of projects, including power plants, manufacturing facilities, defense industries, and public and civil architecture that became defining elements of the Pahlavi dynastyâÂÂs program of modernization in Imperial Iran.
The deteriorating political situation in Europe by the latter half of the interwar period eventually led to a renewed focus on armaments. Following Nazi Germany's 1938 occupation of Czechoslovakia, Ã Â koda's factories started supplying the German army with Panzer 35(t) tanks and Jagdpanzer 38 tank destroyers, both based on earlier designs for the Czechoslovak Army. After World War II, Ã Â koda Works was nationalized and split into several companies by the new communist government. Important products during the Communist era included nuclear reactors and trolley buses.
By the early 1990s, with the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia no longer in power, the companies that were part of the à  koda group were privatized and eventually sold off to a number of international buyers such as German conglomerate Volkswagen and South Korean Doosan. à  koda Works is the predecessor of several modern-day companies, most notably car maker à  koda Auto, power station equipment manufacturer Doosan à  koda Power, as well as tram and train manufacturer à  koda Transportation.
In 1859, Count Ernst von Waldstein-Wartenberg of the aristocratic Waldstein and Wartenberg families set up a branch of his foundry and engineering works in Plzeà Â. The output of the plant, employing over 100 workers, included machinery and equipment for sugar mills, breweries, mines, steam engines, boilers, iron bridge structures, and railway facilities. In 1869, the plant was bought by engineer and entrepreneur Emil à  koda. à  koda soon expanded the firm, and in the 1880s, he founded what was then a very modern steelworks capable of delivering castings weighing dozens of tons. Steel castings and later forgings for larger passenger liners and warships went on to rank alongside the sugar mills as the top export branches of the factory.
In 1899, the ever-expanding business was transformed into a joint-stock company, and before World War I, Ã Â koda Works had become the largest arms manufacturer in Austria-Hungary. It was a navy and army contractor, mainly supplying heavy guns and ammunition.
Exports included castings, such as part of the piping for the Niagara Falls power plant and for the Suez Canal sluices as well as machinery for sugar mills in Turkey, breweries throughout Europe, and guns for the Far East and South America.
World War I brought a drop in the output of peacetime products. Huge sums were invested into expanding production capacities. By then, à  koda Works held majorities in a number of companies in the Czech lands and abroad that were not involved in arms manufacture. In 1917, the company had 35,000 employees in Plzeà  alone.
Following the emergence of the Czechoslovak Republic in 1918, the complex economic conditions of postwar Europe caused the company to be transformed from what was exclusively an arms manufacturer into a multi-sector concern. In addition to traditional branches, the production programme embraced a number of new concepts, such as steam (and later electric) locomotives, freight and passenger vehicles, aircraft, ships, machine tools, steam turbines, power-engineering equipment, etc.
In 1923, the company's world-famous registered trademark, the winged arrow in a circle, was entered in the Companies Register. The deteriorating political situation in Europe saw arms production rise again in the mid-1930s.
à  koda manufactured the triple-barreled gun turrets for the <nowiki/>s of the Austro-Hungarian navy. Prior to World War II, à  koda produced LT-35 tanks, which are better known under their German designation, Panzer 35(t). They were originally produced for the Czechoslovak Army and were used extensively by the Wehrmacht in the Polish campaign, the Fall of France and the German invasion of the Soviet Union. In July 1944, à  koda started production of the Jagdpanzer 38(t).
In 1924, à  koda Works acquired the Laurin & Klement car manufacturer, later known as à  koda Auto. The companies were separated after 1945, when all of the Czechoslovak economy was nationalised.
In 1945, the year that nationalisation efforts began in Czechoslovakia, à  koda was nationalised, and many sections were split from the company. The car works in Mladá Boleslav became Automobilové závody, národnàpodnik, AZNP, today's à  koda Auto, and the aircraft plant in Prague and truck plant became part of a conglomerate of nine truck producers headquartered in Liberec as LIAZ (Liberecké automobilové závody), although the trucks were still marketed as à  kodas. Some factories in Slovakia were also split off, and other plants produced food-industry equipment.
The company was renamed Závody VladimÃÂra IljiÃÂe Lenina (Vladimir Ilyich Lenin Works) in 1953, but since the new name caused losses of sales abroad, the name was changed back to à  koda in 1965.
The factory concentrated on markets in the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc. The company produced a wide range of heavy machinery such as nuclear reactors and locomotives. A lack of updates to its product designs and infrastructure considerably weakened the company's competitive position and its brand.
After 1962, à  koda became well known in the Soviet Union and other countries as a trolley bus manufacturer after it began to export à  koda 9 Tr, one of its most successful models. The successor, à  koda 14 Tr, manufactured between 1982 and 1997, is still widely used, for example, in post-Soviet states.
In 1978, the company was turned into the government-owned group of companies ("koncern") à  koda. It was based in Plzeà  and consisted of the companies: PrvnàbrnÃÂnská strojÃÂrna (First Machine Works of Brno), ÃÂKD Blansko, ÃÂKD Dukla Praha-KarlÃÂn in Prague, Slovenské energetické strojárne S. M. Kirova (Slovak S. M. Kirov Energy Machine Works) in TlmaÃÂe, and Výzkumný ústav energetických zaà ÂÃÂzenà(Energy Facilities Research Institute) in Brno.
After the Communist Party lost power in late 1989, the company was privatized into the hands of management. Mismanagement and asset stripping led to a collapse. The company was restructured and some factories closed. Except for some smaller companies named à  koda and à  koda Auto, after the chaotic 1990s period, the Czech à  koda companies were again regrouped within the holding company à  koda Holding a.s. in 2000. In 2010, the holding company changed its name to à  koda Investment, a.s..
Following the change in the political climate in 1989, Ã Â koda started along a path of privatisation and used the time to come up with an optimal production programme, make new business contacts and look for markets other than those that had so far been its priority markets, communist countries.
In 1991, a foreign partner for the passenger car works à  koda Auto a.s. was sought by the Czech government. Volkswagen was chosen, and the German firm initially took a 30% stake, rising to 100% ownership by 1999. à  koda Auto is now a completely-independent entity from other companies bearing the à  koda name.
In 1992, the company was privatised by the so-called Czech method. It began expanding its production activities, acquiring the Tatra and LIAZ vehicle works and constructing a plant to produce aluminum soft drink cans. The expansion put the company's financial stability in jeopardy. In 1999, it concluded an agreement with creditor banks, and the restructuring of the entire capital structure of the à  koda group was undertaken. The result was the legal and financial stability at the company. Currently, a sectoral restructuring of production companies in the group is under way. In April 2000, à  koda Holding a.s. took over the helm, controlling nineteen primary subsidiaries and most product lines.
In 2003, the Czech government sold its 49% stake to the Appian Group for 350 million CZK; (in 2020, equivalent to 14.78 million USD) later that year the Appian Group acquired the rest of its stake in a liquidation of the previous owner. The Appian Group is a holding company incorporated in the Netherlands and controlled through a screen of shell companies. The real owner or owners are unknown, despite investigations by the Czech police. In September 2010, a group of four current or former à  koda or Appian managers announced that it would acquire à  koda from Appian for an undisclosed price. The Czech media speculated that the acquisition was only a formality, as the managers probably owned the parent company Appian.
à  koda was then focused solely on the transport sector. Other divisions have been sold, a large part of them to the Russian company OMZ (the price was not published, estimated at 1 billion CZK). Some smaller transport companies were acquired, such as part of the Hungarian company Ganz, VÃÂKV (owner of the Velim railway test circuit) and some transport-related assets of the former ÃÂKD, now called à  koda Vagonka. In 2009, à  koda holding announced that the South Korean conglomerate Doosan would acquire its power section for 11,5 billion CZK (US$656 million). Finally, in March 2011, à  koda sold its à  koda Transportation subsidiary to Cyprus-based company à  koda Industry (Europe) Ltd, later renamed CEIL (Central Europe Industries) Ltd.
As of 2012, à  koda Investment still owns the à  koda brand and some real estate but does not perform any industrial activity. Between 2007 and 2012, the company paid dividends to Appian, a sum of 32 billion CZK (1.18 billion euro or US$1.6 billion).
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