Concarril
Constructora Nacional de Carros de Ferrocarril SA, known as Concarril, or less commonly as CNCF, was a government-owned major rail vehicle manufacturer located in Ciudad Sahagún, Mexico, from the 1950s through 1991. It manufactured a wide variety of passenger and freight cars, as well as locomotives. Formed in 1952 (some sources say 1954), it was owned by the Mexican government. After accumulating too much debt, it ceased operating in December 1991 and was sold to Bombardier, Inc. in April 1992 for around U.S.$68 million. At that time, it was the largest manufacturer of railway rolling stock in Mexico. Production resumed at the Ciudad Sahagún facilities after Bombardier took over.
Wikipage redirect
primaryTopic
Concarril
Constructora Nacional de Carros de Ferrocarril SA, known as Concarril, or less commonly as CNCF, was a government-owned major rail vehicle manufacturer located in Ciudad Sahagún, Mexico, from the 1950s through 1991. It manufactured a wide variety of passenger and freight cars, as well as locomotives. Formed in 1952 (some sources say 1954), it was owned by the Mexican government. After accumulating too much debt, it ceased operating in December 1991 and was sold to Bombardier, Inc. in April 1992 for around U.S.$68 million. At that time, it was the largest manufacturer of railway rolling stock in Mexico. Production resumed at the Ciudad Sahagún facilities after Bombardier took over.
has abstract
Bombardier Transportation Méxi ...... 20 años de estancia en México.
@es
Constructora Nacional de Carro ...... ilt freight cars to Venezuela.
@en
extinction year
fate
Privatized; acquired byBombardier Transportation
@en
founding date
1952-04-14
founding year
location city
państwo
number of employees
product
Wikipage page ID
41,439,624
Wikipage revision ID
739,910,459
founder
Víctor Manuel Villaseñor
successor
Bombardier-Concarril SA de CV and Gunderson-Concarril SA
subject
hypernym
comment
Bombardier Transportation Méxi ...... 20 años de estancia en México.
@es
Constructora Nacional de Carro ...... es after Bombardier took over.
@en
label
Bombardier Transportation México
@es
Concarril
@en
wasDerivedFrom
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
Concarril
@en