List of Tesla factories
Tesla, Inc. operates plants worldwide for the manufacture of their products, including electric vehicles,[1] lithium-ion batteries, solar shingles, chargers, automobile parts, manufacturing equipment and tools for its own factories, as well as a lithium ore refinery. The following is a list of current, future and former facilities.[2]
Current production facilities
[edit]Name | City | Country | Products | Opened/ Acquired | Employees | Floor Area | VIN Code [N 1] | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tesla Fremont Factory | Fremont, California | United States | 2010 | 22,000[4] | 5,500,000 sq ft (510,000 m2)[5] | F [6] | Former GM Fremont Assembly and Toyota/GM NUMMI plant.[7] | |
Tesla facilities in Tilburg | Tilburg | Netherlands | Automotive parts | 2013 | 540[8] | 1,688,217 sq ft (156,840.5 m2)[9] | — | Knock-down kit assembly site for Model S & X until 2021.[8][10] Location reconfigured to manufacture parts. |
Tesla Lathrop Factory | Lathrop, California | United States | Automotive parts | 2014 | 885,867 sq ft (82,299.7 m2)[5] | — | Former Chrysler parts distribution building.[11][5] Facility supports the Tesla Fremont Factory and hosts some suppliers.[12] | |
Tesla Kato Road Facility | Fremont, California | United States | 2015 | 506,409 sq ft (47,046.9 m2)[13] | — | Former SolarCity facility. 4680 battery "pilot factory" with annual capacity of 10 GWh.[14][15] | ||
Tesla Tool and Die Factory | Grand Rapids, Michigan | United States | Tool and die casting equipment | 2015 | 100[16] | 176,606 sq ft (16,407.2 m2)[5] | — | Former Riviera Tool and Die factory.[5][17] |
Gigafactory Nevada | Storey County, Nevada | United States |
| 2016 | 7,000 | 5,400,000 sq ft (500,000 m2) | N [18] | Annual battery capacity of up to 35 GWh. |
Gigafactory New York | Buffalo, New York | United States | 2017 | 1,500[19] | 1,200,000 sq ft (110,000 m2)[20] | — | Former SolarCity facility. Location serves as base for autopilot labeling. | |
Tesla Automation | Prüm | Germany | Manufacturing equipment | 2017 | 800[21] | — | Former Grohmann Automation facility.[22] | |
Neutraubling | 2017 | 100[23] | — | Former Grohmann Automation branch location. | ||||
Neuwied | 2020 | 210[24] | — | Former Assembly & Test Europe factory.[25] Manufactures transmission and battery assembly lines.[24] | ||||
Tesla Brooklyn Park | Brooklyn Park, Minnesota | United States | Manufacturing equipment | 2017 | 150[26] | 125,560 sq ft (11,665 m2)[27] | — | Former Perbix Machine Company factory.[28] |
Tesla Toronto Automation | Richmond Hill, Ontario | Canada | Battery manufacturing equipment | 2019 | 150[29] | — | Former Hibar Systems facility.[30][29] | |
Markham, Ontario | Canada | 2021 | 110,000 sq ft (10,000 m2)[31][32] | — | Former Hibar Systems branch location. | |||
Gigafactory Shanghai | Shanghai | China |
| 2019 | 20,000[33] | 4,500,000 sq ft (418,000 m2)[5] | C | |
Tesla Shanghai Supercharger Factory | Shanghai | China | Supercharger | 2021 | 54,000 sq ft (5,000 m2)[34] | — | Annual production of 10,000 chargers.[35] | |
Gigafactory Berlin-Brandenburg | Grünheide | Germany |
| 2022[36] | 10,000[37] | 2,240,000 sq ft (208,000 m2) | B | |
Gigafactory Texas | Austin, Texas | United States |
| 2022 | 20,000[38] | 10,000,000 sq ft (930,000 m2)[39] | A [6] | Also serves as Tesla HQ. |
Megafactory Lathrop | Lathrop, California | United States | Megapack | 2022 | 1,000[40] | 440,538 sq ft (40,927.3 m2)[41] | — | Former JCPenney distribution center.[42][43] |
Future production facilities
[edit]Name | City | Country | Products | Expected Opening | Employees | Floor Area | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hayward facility | Hayward, California | United States | Automotive parts | 2023 | 148,500 sq ft (13,800 m2)[44] | ||
Fremont[citation needed] battery factory | Fremont,[citation needed] California | United States | Lithium-ion batteries | 2023 | 210,000 sq ft (20,000 m2)[45] | Supports Kato Road 4680 battery "pilot factory." | |
Tesla Lithium (refinery) | Robstown, Texas | United States |
| 2024 | 250[46] | Estimated annual material capacity for 50 GWh of batteries.[47][48] | |
Megafactory Shanghai | Shanghai | China | Megapack | 2025[49] | Estimated annual production of 10,000 Megapacks.[50] | ||
Gigafactory Mexico | Monterrey, Nuevo Leon | Mexico | Next-gen vehicle | 2026 | 10,000[51] |
Former production facilities
[edit]Name | City | Country | Products | In use | Employees | VIN Code | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tesla Menlo Park Factory | Menlo Park, California | United States | Roadster (1st gen) | 2008–2012 | 1 [52] | Former Chevrolet dealership.[53] Final assembly of gliders manufactured at Lotus Cars in Hethel.[54][55] Location closed and land was converted to mixed-used development by 2022.[56] | |
Lotus Cars | Hethel | United Kingdom | Roadster (1st gen) | 2008–2012 | 3 [57] | Built gliders under contract for assembly in Menlo Park, complete assembly of vehicles for European distribution. | |
Tesla Palo Alto Facility | Palo Alto, California | United States |
| 2010–2016 | 650[59] | P [60] | Initial Model S cars built at the facility in 2010.[58] From 2010 to 2016, supplied powertrains for Tesla and other automakers.[59] Location served as Tesla HQ from 2010 to 2021.[61] Location remains active for other uses.[citation needed] |
Tesla Elgin | Elgin, Illinois | United States | Manufacturing equipment | 2017-2021 | — | Former Compass Automation factory. Produced automated assembly and inspection systems.[62] |
Note: Maxwell Technologies was acquired by Tesla in 2019 for their battery technology.[63] Maxwell continued to operate as subsidiary until 2021.[64] Due to the short holding time and no known products produced under Tesla, their production facilities are not listed above.
Notes
[edit]- ^ The eleventh character of the vehicle identification number (VIN) indicates the factory the car has been built in. "R" in the eleventh character of the VIN denotes a "Research" vehicle with no specific factory.[3]
References
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External links
[edit]- Manufacturing official website,
- "Here's Where Tesla Produces Its Electric Cars Around the World", Newsweek, 2021-08-03