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Porsche celebrates 50 years of Weissach

The birthplace of Porsche vehicles since the 1970s has reached a milestone anniversar­y

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Porsche is celebratin­g the 50th anniversar­y of its Weissach Developmen­t Centre, which today stretches across 100 hectares and employs 6,700 people. Located just 15 miles from Zuffenhaus­en, the site in Weissach became home to the Porsche design and developmen­t department­s when it opened on 1 October 1971, but the area’s history with Porsche can be traced even further back in time.

Porsche first began its search for a dedicated test track and research site in the 1950s, but finding the right location was far from simple as Ferry Porsche placed great importance on the environmen­tal impact of such a facility.

Racing driver, Herbert Linge, suggested his home town, Weissach – it was far enough away from densely populated Stuttgart yet convenient for Zuffenhaus­en. Test engineer, Helmuth Bott, made the first sketches of the ‘Weissach Project’ on 29 January 1960. Ground was broken for constructi­on at the site – which encompasse­s the Weissach and Flacht districts – the following October, and a skid pad and test track were created where Porsche could test its cars (the 901 amongst them) to the limit and beyond.

By 1974 a hexagonal shaped building – still in situ today – was built. Extensions in 1984 and 1992 were part of various expansions, and in 1986 Porsche opened a cutting-edge wind tunnel. Today the Weissach facility is where vehicles travel from drawing board to prototype via developmen­t and testing. Plans are afoot to expand the site by a further 12 hectares by 2025.

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