New United Motor Manufacturing, Inc. (NUMMI) was an American
automobile manufacturing company in
Fremont, California
Fremont () is a city in Alameda County, California, United States. Located in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, Bay Area, Fremont has a population of 230,504 as of 2020, making it the fourth List of cities and towns in the San F ...
, jointly owned by
General Motors
General Motors Company (GM) is an American Multinational corporation, multinational Automotive industry, automotive manufacturing company headquartered in Detroit, Michigan, United States. The company is most known for owning and manufacturing f ...
and
Toyota
is a Japanese Multinational corporation, multinational Automotive industry, automotive manufacturer headquartered in Toyota City, Aichi, Japan. It was founded by Kiichiro Toyoda and incorporated on August 28, 1937. Toyota is the List of manuf ...
, that opened in 1984 and closed in April 2010. The plant is located in the East Industrial area of Fremont next to the
Mud Slough between
Interstate 880 and
Interstate 680, the plant's peak production year was 2006, when it manufactured 428,633 vehicles.
After the plant was closed by its owners, the facility was sold to
Tesla and reopened in October 2010, becoming known as the
Tesla Fremont Factory.
History
Background
Before NUMMI, the site was the former
Fremont Assembly that
General Motors
General Motors Company (GM) is an American Multinational corporation, multinational Automotive industry, automotive manufacturing company headquartered in Detroit, Michigan, United States. The company is most known for owning and manufacturing f ...
operated between 1962 and 1982.
Employees at the Fremont plant were "considered the worst workforce in the automobile industry in the United States," according to a later recounting by a leader of the workers' own union, the
United Auto Workers
The United Auto Workers (UAW), fully named International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, is an American labor union that represents workers in the United States (including Puerto Rico) and sou ...
(UAW).
GM as a company was
departmentalized (design, manufacturing) as per
Henry Ford's
division of labor
The division of labour is the separation of the tasks in any economic system or organisation so that participants may specialise (Departmentalization, specialisation). Individuals, organisations, and nations are endowed with or acquire specialis ...
, but without the necessary communication and collaboration between the departments. There was an adversarial relationship between workers and plant supervisors, with management not considering the employees' view on production, and quantity was preferred over quality.
Like all American car plants, the production lines at Fremont seldom stopped, and when mistakes were made, cars continued down the line with the expectation that they would be fixed later.
By the early 1980s, the adversarial relationship had deteriorated to the point where employees drank alcohol, smoked marijuana (at the time, an illegal activity), were frequently absent (enough so that the production line could not be started), and even committed petty acts of sabotage such as putting "Coke bottles inside the door panels, so they'd rattle and annoy the customer."
Attempts to discipline workers were often met with grievances or even strikes, putting the plant into near-continuous chaos. By 1982, GM had had enough and closed Fremont Assembly and laid off its thousands of workers.
Transforming Fremont Assembly into NUMMI
At about the same time, GM was struggling to profitably build high-quality and fuel-efficient small cars that consumers demanded after the
energy crisis of the 1970s
The 1970s energy crisis occurred when the Western world, particularly the United States, Canada, Western Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, faced substantial petroleum shortages as well as elevated prices. The two worst crises of this period wer ...
. Consumers started turning to foreign automakers for these vehicles, prompting the U.S. Congress to consider import restrictions to protect the domestic auto industry.
That led GM and Toyota to team up and create New United Motor Manufacturing, Inc. (NUMMI), a
joint venture
A joint venture (JV) is a business entity created by two or more parties, generally characterized by shared ownership, shared returns and risks, and shared governance. Companies typically pursue joint ventures for one of four reasons: to acce ...
to manufacture vehicles to be sold under both brands.
GM saw the joint venture as a way to get access to quality small cars
and an opportunity to learn about the
Toyota Production System
The Toyota Production System (TPS) is an integrated socio-technical system, developed by Toyota, that comprises its management philosophy and practices. The TPS is a management system that organizes manufacturing and logistics for the automobile ...
and
The Toyota Way, a series of
lean manufacturing and management philosophies that had made the company a leader in the automotive manufacturing and production industry. For Toyota, the factory gave the company its first manufacturing base in North America allowing it to avoid tariffs on imported vehicles and saw GM as a partner that could show them how to navigate the American labor environment, particularly relations with the
United Auto Workers
The United Auto Workers (UAW), fully named International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, is an American labor union that represents workers in the United States (including Puerto Rico) and sou ...
union.
The companies made the unusual choice to remake the troubled Fremont Assembly into the new NUMMI plant. The leadership of the UAW union insisted on re-hiring the same union leadership that had overseen GM's worst workforce. GM was against it, but Toyota agreed, believing that their system could turn things around. However, Toyota insisted that the plant would need to operate differently and old seniority rules would not apply. The workers hated the proposed changes, but desperately needed jobs. Ultimately, over 85% of NUMMI's initial workforce were the workers laid off at Fremont Assembly in 1982.
GM would also assign 16 managers to the plant and Toyota sent 30 managers and production coordinators from Japan, including the CEO,
Tatsuro Toyoda, part of the company's founding family.
Ahead of the reopening of the plant, Toyota sent many of the workers to
Toyota's Takaoka plant in Japan to learn the
Toyota Production System
The Toyota Production System (TPS) is an integrated socio-technical system, developed by Toyota, that comprises its management philosophy and practices. The TPS is a management system that organizes manufacturing and logistics for the automobile ...
and actually work for a few days on the assembly line.
Workers who made the transition identified the emphasis on quality and teamwork by Toyota management as what motivated a change in work ethic.
Among the cultural changes were the same uniform, parking and cafeterias for all levels of employment in order to promote a team concept, and a no-
layoff
A layoff or downsizing is the temporary suspension or permanent termination of employment of an employee or, more commonly, a group of employees (collective layoff) for business reasons, such as personnel management or downsizing an organization ...
policy.
Built-in process quality and employee suggestion programs for
continual improvement were other changes.
Consensus decision-making
Consensus decision-making is a group decision-making process in which participants work together to develop proposals for actions that achieve a broad acceptance. #Origin and meaning of term, Consensus is reached when everyone in the group '' ...
reached management level, in contrast with the old
departmentalization
Departmentalization (or departmentalisation) refers to the process of "grouping the organizational activities and structure into departments". Division of labour creates Expert, specialists who need :wikt:coordination, coordination and the coordi ...
.
By December 1984 (two years after the closure of Fremont Assembly), NUMMI's first car, a yellow
Chevrolet Nova, rolled off the assembly line. The plant started producing the Toyota Corolla in September 1986.
Almost right away, the NUMMI factory was producing cars at the same speed as the Japanese factories and Corollas produced at NUMMI were judged to be equal in quality to those produced in Japan with a similar number of defects per 100 vehicles.
In 1990, for the 1991 model year, Toyota started building the
Toyota Hilux (also known as the Toyota Pickup) at NUMMI, allowing the company to completely avoid the
chicken tax, a 25 percent
tariff
A tariff or import tax is a duty (tax), duty imposed by a national Government, government, customs territory, or supranational union on imports of goods and is paid by the importer. Exceptionally, an export tax may be levied on exports of goods ...
on
light truck
Light truck or light-duty truck is a US classification for vehicles with a gross vehicle weight up to and a payload capacity up to . Similar goods vehicle classes in the European Union, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand are termed light ...
s imposed in 1964. Previously, the company had avoided a large portion of the tariff by importing the truck as an incomplete
chassis cab (which included the entire truck, less the truck bed) which only faced a 4% tariff.
Once in the United States,
Toyota Auto Body California (TABC) would produce the truck beds and attach them to the trucks. TABC was the first manufacturing investment in the U.S. for Toyota. This tariff loophole was closed in 1980.
NUMMI did face some financial challenges, with cars costing more to build than at other GM plants and only operating at 58.6% capacity by 1988.
The plant had not reached
break-even
Break-even (or break even), often abbreviated as B/E in finance (sometimes called point of equilibrium), is the point of balance making neither a Profit (economics), profit nor a loss. It involves a situation when a business makes just enough reve ...
by 1991.
In January 1995, NUMMI began producing the
Toyota Tacoma, a pickup truck designed exclusively for the North American market.
Up to May 2010, NUMMI built an average of 6,000 vehicles a week, or nearly eight million cars and trucks since opening in 1984.
In 1997, NUMMI produced 357,809 cars and trucks. Production reached its annual peak of 428,633 units in 2006.
The end of the joint venture
Toyota took the lessons it learned from NUMMI and went on to establish the wholly-owned Toyota Motor Manufacturing USA (later renamed
Toyota Motor Manufacturing Kentucky) and
Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada plants in 1986, and by 2009 the company was operating a dozen manufacturing facilities in North America.
However, NUMMI remained Toyota's only unionized plant in the United States.
GM executives, particularly CEO
John F. Smith Jr., attempted to spread the Toyota Production System to other assembly plants,
but it proved largely unsuccessful. Despite having a front row seat to learn about the production system, by 1998 (15 years later) GM had still not been able to implement
lean manufacturing in the rest of the United States,
though GM managers trained at NUMMI were successful in introducing the approach to its unionized factories in Brazil.
By 2009, GM was in serious financial trouble and
filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization. In April the company confirmed its commitment to NUMMI and in June announced that it was scrapping the Pontiac brand which would end production of the Corolla-derived
Pontiac Vibe at NUMMI by August 2009.
That triggered several months of discussions between the automakers, trying to find products that could be produced at the factory for both companies, with Toyota even offering to build a version of its
Prius hybrid for GM at the factory.
Fremont Mayor
Bob Wasserman, city officials and California Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Arnold Alois Schwarzenegger (born July30, 1947) is an Austrian and American actor, businessman, former politician, and former professional bodybuilder, known for his roles in high-profile action films. Governorship of Arnold Schwarzenegger, ...
lobbied the automakers to find a product and keep NUMMI open.
State officials crafted sales
tax exemption
Tax exemption is the reduction or removal of a liability to make a compulsory payment that would otherwise be imposed by a ruling power upon persons, property, income, or transactions. Tax-exempt status may provide complete relief from taxes, redu ...
on new factory equipment to preserve NUMMI.
A regional committee was formed in February 2010 to investigate the closure of the plant,
and the facility was
appraised while operating.
The talks ultimately failed and in June 2009 the GM announced that it would pull out of NUMMI.
On August 27, 2009, Toyota announced that it would also discontinue production at NUMMI by March 2010, marking the first time the company had ever closed a factory.
In November 2009 call with autoworkers Toyota's head of U.S. sales said that though it was a difficult decision to shut down the plant, "the economics of having a plant in California so far away from the
supplier lines" in the Midwest "just doesn't make business sense" for Toyota.
Autoworkers prepared for the shut down by refreshing skills and planning for career transitions.
In March 2010, 90% of the workers at the plant approved a $281 million
severance package
A severance package is pay and benefits that employees may be entitled to receive when they leave employment at a company unwilfully. In addition to their remaining regular pay, it may include some of the following:
* Any additional payment based ...
from Toyota that had been negotiated by the UAW, averaging $54,000 to the plant's 4,700 employees.
Production of the Corolla in North America was shifted to
Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada until the new
Toyota Motor Manufacturing Mississippi assembly plant could open in October 2011. Production of the Tacoma had already partially shifted to
Toyota Motor Manufacturing de Baja California in 2004, and the remaining work shifted to
Toyota Motor Manufacturing Texas.
At 9:40am on April 1, 2010, the plant produced its last car, a red Toyota Corolla.
NUMMI sold off equipment at an auction,
with robots and tooling going to Toyota's plants in Kentucky, Texas and Mississippi.
NUMMI sold some equipment to Tesla for $15 million.
Reuse of the factory
Ahead of the closure of NUMMI, several possible uses for the facility were proposed.
In January 2010, the land was considered for a new stadium for the
Oakland Athletics
The Oakland Athletics (frequently referred to as the Oakland A's) were an American Major League Baseball (MLB) team based in Oakland, California from 1968 to 2024. The Athletics were a member club of the American League (AL) American League We ...
of
Major League Baseball
Major League Baseball (MLB) is a professional baseball league composed of 30 teams, divided equally between the National League (baseball), National League (NL) and the American League (AL), with 29 in the United States and 1 in Canada. MLB i ...
. It is close to the proposed site of
Cisco Field, which was never formally approved.
On March 10, 2010,
Aurica Motors announced that it intended to raise investment capital and garner federal economic stimulus funds to help retrain the workers and retool the facility for production of electric vehicles. Both proposals went nowhere.
On May 20, 2010,
Tesla Motors announced that it would purchase most (210 of 370 acres)
of the former NUMMI site from Toyota for $42 million, significantly under market value.
As part of the agreement, Toyota would also purchase $50 million of common stock when Tesla held its IPO the next month. In exchange, Tesla agreed to partner with Toyota on the "development of electric vehicles, parts, and production system and engineering support." The two companies would later end their partnership in 2017.
The plant, renamed the
Tesla Fremont Factory, produces the
Model S,
Model X,
Model 3, and
Model Y vehicles.
[Tierney, Christine]
Toyota invests in Tesla to help reopen Calif. plant
''The Detroit News'', May 20, 2010. Retrieved: May 22, 2010 , the plant employs 22,000 people, far greater than the 5,500 employees of NUMMI, and produced nearly 560,000 vehicles, 30 percent more than the maximum output of NUMMI.
Models produced
During its time in operation, the NUMMI joint venture factory produced the following models (model years):
*
Chevrolet Nova (1985–1988)
*
Geo/Chevrolet Prizm (1989–2002)
*
Pontiac Vibe/
Toyota Voltz (2003–2010)
*
Toyota Corolla
The is a series of compact cars (formerly Subcompact car, subcompact) manufactured and marketed globally by the Japanese automaker Toyota Motor Corporation. Introduced in 1966, the Corolla was the best-selling car worldwide by 1974 and has bee ...
(1987–2010)
**
Toyota Corolla (E80) FX16 (1987)
**
Toyota Corolla (E90) (1988–1992)
**
Toyota Corolla (E100) (1993–1997)
**
Toyota Corolla (E110)
The Corolla E110 was the eighth generation of cars sold by Toyota under the Corolla nameplate.
Introduced in May 1995, the eighth generation shared its platform (and doors, on some models) with its predecessor. Due to the Lost Decades recessi ...
(1998–2002)
**
Toyota Corolla (E130) (2002–2008)
**
Toyota Corolla (E140) (2008–2010)
*
Toyota Hilux/Pickup (1992–1994)
*
Toyota Tacoma (1995–2010)
See also
*
CAMI Automotive (CAMI) — A similar joint venture in
Canada
Canada is a country in North America. Its Provinces and territories of Canada, ten provinces and three territories extend from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean and northward into the Arctic Ocean, making it the world's List of coun ...
between
Suzuki
is a Japanese multinational mobility manufacturer headquartered in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture, Shizuoka. It manufactures automobiles, motorcycles, all-terrain vehicles (ATVs), outboard motor, outboard marine engines, wheelchairs and a va ...
and
General Motors
General Motors Company (GM) is an American Multinational corporation, multinational Automotive industry, automotive manufacturing company headquartered in Detroit, Michigan, United States. The company is most known for owning and manufacturing f ...
from 1986 to 2009; now operating as a wholly owned
GM plant.
*
United Australian Automobile Industries
United Australian Automobile Industries (UAAI) was an automobile model sharing firm that operated in Australia between 1987 and 1996 as the result of an agreement between Holden (the Australian subsidiary of General Motors) and Toyota Australia ...
(UAAI) — A similar joint venture in
Australia
Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country comprising mainland Australia, the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania and list of islands of Australia, numerous smaller isl ...
between Toyota and
GM-Holden from 1989 to 1996.
*''
Gung Ho'' — A 1986 comedy film portraying a similar joint venture and is used by Toyota executives in Japan as an example of how not to manage Americans.
References
External links
Autointell NUMMI pagePhoto Tour of NUMMIfrom
Edmunds.comJD Power Gold Plant Award for GMNUMMI (2015)from
This American LifeNUMMI production over the years
{{DEFAULTSORT:Nummi
General Motors factories
Toyota factories
Motor vehicle assembly plants in California
Manufacturing companies based in the San Francisco Bay Area
Companies based in Fremont, California
Vehicle manufacturing companies established in 1984
Vehicle manufacturing companies disestablished in 2010
1984 establishments in California
2010 disestablishments in California
Defunct companies based in the San Francisco Bay Area
Industrial buildings completed in 1960
Former joint ventures