2006 Bugatti Veyron Workshop in Molsheim
(from Bugatti Press
Release) On Saturday, 3 September 2005, Bugatti
Automobiles S.A.S. hosted opening festivities for the ‘Atelier’, its
new plant dedicated to production of the new Bugatti. At the same
time, the company’s headquarters, the Château St. Jean, along with
the neighbouring buildings, were officially opened for their
intended purpose.
In opening remarks before numerous guests from politics, industry,
the media and Bugatti clientele, Dr Thomas Bscher, President of
Bugatti Automobiles S.A.S., paid tribute to Bugatti, stating:
‘Bugatti in Molsheim is more than just a company headquarters or
simply another automobile production facility in Alsace. Today, on
this special day, what Bugatti in Molsheim means is the realisation
of a vision, the renaissance of the legendary Bugatti brand. But
Bugatti in Molsheim is even more than that. Bugatti is Molsheim –
or, if you wish, Molsheim is Bugatti. This is where, in 1909, Ettore
Bugatti established his company, and where, in 1910, he produced the
first automobile bearing his name. And it is on this very spot – and
this is a source of great pleasure to me – that his legacy and his
philosophy shall live on. We are proud to bring back the Bugatti
tradition right here in Molsheim, and we are convinced that we shall
be able to continue this tradition in the same sense in which it was
intended by its founder.’
In 1956, the final attempts had failed, in the wake of the death of
the company’s founder in 1947 – preceded in death in 1939 by his son
Jean, with whom he collaborated – to keep the substantially weakened
company alive. After 47 years’ production, in the course of which
7,950 Bugattis of models 13 through 251 had been manufactured, the
gates to the Bugatti factory in Molsheim were forced to close.
Today, nearly 50 years
later to the day, the production of Bugatti automobiles is resuming,
making Molsheim once again the hub of the Bugatti world. As a centre
for reminiscence, this picturesque, small city near Strasbourg has
never lost its significance. The area’s ‘Enthusiasts Bugatti
Alsace’, together with their friends in the various Bugatti clubs
throughout the entire world, are in large measure responsible for
keeping the brand alive over the decades – even in the absence of
the product itself. This is an experience in which various other
prestigious automobile brands with melodious names have not shared.
It is in this fact that the strength of the Bugatti brand values is
expressed most clearly. The admiration for ‘art on wheels’, the cool
achievement of the aesthetic tenacity of Ettore Bugatti was a man
who was first and foremost an artist, not a technician. The grandeur
of the victories in the glorious years of dirt-encrusted heroes on
the racecourses of this world and, not least, the suitability of
these racing cars for everyday driving – the latter is what made
Bugatti cars accessible to a broader clientele. The prestige of
inspired design and the exclusiveness of individual models that
helped catapult certain Bugatti models into the astronomical price
classes.
In April 1998, the Volkswagen Group took over the Bugatti trademark, presenting the brand to the public for the first time at the International Motor Show in Paris with a study for a two-door coupe it had commissioned Italdesign to create: the Bugatti EB 118. A few months later, in March 1999, at the Geneva Motor Show, a design of the EB 218, itself also created at Italdesign, caused a sensation with a four-door saloon using the same 18-cylinder, 6.3 litre engine with 555 hp. This was followed, the same year, at the IAA in Frankfurt, by the centre-engine design, the Bugatti EB 18/3 Chiron; once again Giugiaro was responsible for the design. And shortly thereafter, in Tokyo, the Bugatti EB 18/4 Veyron celebrated its world premiere, a model designed at the ‘Volkswagen Centre of Excellence Design’ under the directorship of Hartmut Warkuss. No more than nearly a year later, in autumn 2000 in Paris, the Veyron 16.4 was shown for the first time. The Bugatti Veyron 16.4 with the ultimate in performance features, the 1001 hp, 8-litre, 16-cylinder engine and its technological specifications – 1250 Nm at 2,200 rpm, peak speed of more than 400 km/h, four turbochargers and permanent four-wheel drive – features that have remained in place to this day, celebrated its debut at the IAA in Frankfurt in September of 2001.
In 2001, the decision
was made to go into serial production of the Bugatti Veyron 16.4
with a lot not to exceed 300 cars. In December of the following
year, ‘Bugatti Automobiles S.A.S.’ was established, a subsidiary of
‘Volkswagen France’ with headquarters in Molsheim. And nearly a year
to the day thereafter, at the end of 2003, Dr Thomas Bscher took
overall charge of the Bugatti project as the new President of
‘Bugatti Automobiles S.A.S.’. Appointed to assist him was D.
Wolfgang Schreiber, serving as technical director and simultaneously
as head of ‘Bugatti Engineering GmbH’ in Wolfsburg, where all of the
development work for the new Bugatti is co-ordinated and, in part,
carried out. His functional mission was to put the Bugatti Veyron
16.4 on the road.
The new team subjected the entire project to a technological and
financial feasibility study commissioned, among other things, to
develop a realistic timeframe for the launch of production of the
new Bugatti. Shortly before the 2004 Geneva Motor Show, the
Executive Board at the Group approved plans for the ‘new’ Veyron
project, scheduling production to begin in September 2005. This
schedule has been met to this day.
This is made all the more remarkable by the fact that the Bugatti Veyron 16.4, despite its very limited production, is called upon to meet all of the specifications of the VW Group in their entirety. This means innumerable time-consuming trials and tests throughout the entire world, all devoted to the fulfilment of a single objective: to measure up to the strict, indeed relentless quality and quality-assurance standards the company has laid down. This ensures that this super sportscar will be suitable for everyday driving as well, to a degree never before witnessed in any other serial-production vehicle of this type. In the world of modern, serial-production automobiles, the synthesis which has been brought to fruition in the Bugatti Veyron 16.4 is a synthesis between easy and problem-free operation in day-to-day traffic and breathtaking driving in the high-performance area. A reference which would be music to the ears of Ettore Bugatti, whose early successes themselves were rooted in this unique combination.
Tandem to the ongoing
activities in the product area, extensive construction work has been
launched at the location in Molsheim. To begin with, the Château St.
Jean – an edifice that Ettore Bugatti never used as a residence but
rather only as a form of what, in today’s parlance would be termed a
customer service centre, was completely renovated. The two stalls
located to the south and the north of the castle, which in Bugatti’s
day served as stables, were telemetrically surveyed, dismantled and,
using as many of the original elements of the structure, such as
wall segments and woodwork, as were still usable, reconstructed in a
faithful copy of the original structures. In this new ‘Bugatti Era’,
these structures will for the most part have an administrative
character; in one of the spaces, clients will also be able to
receive their Bugatti Veyron in an historical setting.
The core of the investments made in Molsheim is the ‘Atelier’ in
which production of the Bugatti Veyron 16.4 is beginning in
September 2005. In its architectural form, this modern production
facility has been given stylistic features dipping back into the
history of the automotive brand. With a southern exposure, the
light-filled, glassed main hall is only partly evocative of an
automobile-manufacturing operation in the classical sense of the
term – it reminds the beholder more of a ‘Formula One laboratory’.
The setting is dominated by clinical cleanliness and precision
workmanship with highly developed component parts. And yet the
‘Atelier’ can still hold its own against the ‘major players’. A
runway for the measurement of relevant functional-performance data
and a generously proportioned water-spraying system for testing
vehicle water tightness are to be found here, alongside a light
chamber under the glaring lamps of which the slightest inconsistency
in a car’s paintwork mercilessly catches the eye. A small test
course has been laid out in the green spaces in front of the
building. It can be used to supplement the road-test programme
compulsory for all Veyrons and which concludes the vehicle’s
production process. A logistics centre erected next to the ‘Atelier’
rounds out the complex of buildings in Molsheim.
Thanks to Bugatti,
Molsheim has been elevated from anonymity to find its own place on
the map – not just of the automotive world. And this is certainly
justified, both for the location of Ettore Bugatti’s production
facilities and his private residence, which is located immediately
adjacent. With the purchase of the Château St. Jean and the property
surrounding it, comprising some 140,000 m2 and the site of all other
modern-day Bugatti activities as well, this has changed somewhat in
purely geographic terms. To be precise, the property is situated in
Dorlisheim which, while within sight of the former Bugatti factory,
is nevertheless located on the other side of the Bruche River. This
has been the source of inspiration for a ‘postal sleight of hand’ on
the part of the new management at Bugatti. To be able to carry the
historic value of the location in Molsheim into the Bugatti future
while at the same time satisfying the administrative regulations of
the Land, a compromise was negotiated with local authorities. A
Solomonic solution was arrived at with the latter – who took a very
favourable view of the entire Bugatti project right from the
beginning, providing their active support throughout its
development. The correct and complete address of Bugatti ‘Cru 2005’
is: Bugatti Automobiles S.A.S., 1, Château St. Jean, Dorlisheim,
F-67 120 Molsheim.
Bugatti is on the threshold of a new era. Its location is Molsheim.
The company is international. Ettore Bugatti was born in 1881 in
Italy. He completed his technological instruction in Germany, first
with de Dietrich in Niederbronn in Alsace – at the time still a part
of Germany – and then at Deutz in Cologne, before he built his first
automobile in 1909 in Molsheim. Since 1998, Bugatti has belonged to
the Volkswagen Group as a French company with a French headquarters.
The modern-day Bugatti team – every bit as international as the
company itself – views the legacy of Ettore Bugatti as both a
challenge and an obligation. Thus, Dr Bscher concluded his welcoming
remarks with these words:
‘We have brought the Bugatti Veyron from a visionary sketch into the
reality of the contemporary automotive world. In doing so, we have
laid the cornerstone for leading one of the most renowned and
reputable makes of automobile from the virtuality of the past into
the hard competition of the future. The Bugatti brand will rise to
this competition. The Bugatti Veyron is the best sports car in the
world, a car the likes of which the world has, in this form, never
seen before. Its technical data are second to none. The Veyron
closes the gap between myth and vision. We believe that we have
interpreted Ettore Bugatti’s ideas in the 21st century in much the
same manner as he himself may have done. Whether we have succeeded
in this remains to be shown. But one thing is certain. The Bugatti
Veyron is just the beginning. This automotive brand is alive – and
will live on.’