Upper Hutt Leader

Remember Trentham’s last Holden

- ROB MAETZIG

On Friday when Holden shut down its assembly plant in the Adelaide suburb of Elizabeth, the closure marked the end of motor vehicle assembly in Australia for good.

For the Australian­s it was a sad occasion, not only because closure over the last 12 months of the Ford, Toyota and now Holden assembly plants has cost thousands of jobs, but also because it puts an end to a rich Aussie history of car assembly.

Right now it is worth rememberin­g that Holden went through exactly the same thing in New Zealand 27 years ago. When it shut the doors at its Trentham plant in 1990, it ended 64 years of assembly of General Motors vehicles - during which almost 600,000 vehicles were built.

It all began back in 1926 when General Motors New Zealand Ltd opened a vehicle assembly plant in Petone. Right from the outset it began producing a wide range of North American-sourced vehicles - the first car off the line was a four cylinder Chevrolet sedan.

That factory, which initially had close to 250 employees, produced more than 1000 Chevrolets in its first eight months of operation. By 1928 it had added Pontiac, Buick and Oldsmobile to the list of vehicles being built there, and staff had grown to 500.

In 1929 the Petone plant built its 12,000th GM vehicle, and just over a year later British Vauxhall cars and Bedford trucks began to be assembled.

By 1936 more than 37,000 vehicles had been assembled at Petone. By 1939 it had doubled in floor space and employed 760 staff.

But then World War II was declared, and the factory was converted to munitions production.

‘‘Following the introducti­on of the Government's plan to gradually phase out import duties on cars, the decision wasmade to close the Trentham plant as well.’’

After the war ended, import restrictio­ns meant that it wasn’t until early 1947 that the first postwar GM car - a Chevrolet - rolled off the assembly line. But business picked up from there as the New Zealand economy recovered, and by 1952 the 100,000th vehicle had been built.

Two years later New Zealand was introduced to a new GM brand - Holden.

Holden cars began to be exported from Australia to New Zealand as fully built-up cars, but a few years later they began to be assembled at Petone - the first such car, an FE series sedan, rolled off the line on January 31 1957.

Ten years later GMNZ opened a second vehicle assembly plant at Trentham, where it built such vehicles as the Holden HQ series, the Vauxhall Viva, and from 1979, the Commodore. That car instantly became one of New Zealand’s most popular vehicles, consistent­ly among the top-three sellers for a number of years.

As New Zealand moved into the 1980s, motor vehicle preference­s began to shift towards Japanese product, and as a result demand for British vehicles began to wane. GMNZ responded by closing the Petone plant in 1984 - the last vehicle to be produced there was a Bedford van - and all production was centred at Trentham.

Five years later assembly of the Holden Camira and Barina stopped, leaving just the Commodore to be built there. Then, following the introducti­on of the Government’s plan to gradually phase out import duties on imported cars, the decision was made to close the Trentham plant as well and import the Commodores in fully built-up form from Australia.

The last Commodore to be built in New Zealand was a V6-engined VN, which rolled off the line on November 21, 1990. It took total production of GM vehicles from both Petone and Trentham to 593,945. In 1994 General Motors New Zealand changed its name to Holden New Zealand, and five years later it shifted its head office to Auckland - thus ending a decades-long industrial relationsh­ip with the Hutt Valley.

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