Next Generation Mercedes-Benz M-Class "Job One" Rolls off Production Line in Tuscaloosa
Press Release
- Worldwide public debut at Detroit Motor Show in January 2005
- $600 million plant expansion nearly completed
- Doubling workforce and capacity of Tuscaloosa plant
Since 2001, DaimlerChrysler AG has invested $600 million to expand the plant and double production capacity from 80,000 to 160,000 vehicles per year. The plant expansion is nearly complete. The Tuscaloosa plant was the first Mercedes-Benz passenger vehicle factory outside of Germany. Currently MBUSI employs approximately 3,400 people, with the workforce growing to approximately 4,000 by 2006. Both the M-Class and the all-new Mercedes-Benz R-Class Grand Sports Tourer will be produced at the Tuscaloosa plant begin-ning in 2005.
The new M-Class will follow an extremely successful predecessor. More than 570,000 vehicles of the first generation M-Class were produced at MBUSI in Tuscaloosa since start of production back in 1997.
The demand for the M-Class was so great that the plant had to be expanded within its first year of production. In addition to the initial investment of $300 million, the company invested another $100 million to increase capacity from the original 60,000 planned to more than 80,000 vehicles a year. Together with the current $600 million investment the total capital investment in Tuscaloosa is now more than $1 billion. In 2002, the Tuscaloosa plant built a record-breaking figure of more than 88,000 M-Class vehicles.
During the peak years of the product lifecycle from 1999 to 2002 an additional 77,100 M-Class vehicles were produced at Magna Steyr, a supplemental plant in Graz, Austria, to help meet demand in Europe. Altogether close to 650,000 M-Class vehicles were produced during the vehicle's lifecycle. The M-Class is sold in 135 countries world-wide.
In 2004, 73,500 M-Class vehicles were produced at MBUSI in Tuscaloosa. The final first generation M-Class sport utility vehicle rolled off the line on December 9, 2004. Along with the first M-Class that was produced back in February 1997, this final vehicle will remain in the company's museum at the Tuscaloosa plant site.











