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Lordstown Motors Corp. takes over shuttered General Motors plant with focus on electric pickup trucks

The startup company plans to hire 400 production workers at the outset, but said it still needs more investors before manufacturing can begin.

LORDSTOWN, Ohio — News surfaced last week that General Motors was selling its shuttered Lordstown plant to a startup company.

Officials with Lordstown Motors Corp. invited the media for a tour of the facility and for the opportunity to introduce themselves Thursday morning.

"The Lordstown Complex will serve as our headquarters, with our mission being to create the leading electric vehicle epicenter in the region," according to their site. "This plant -- combined with the legendary capability of the people who work there -- is where we will build the work vehicles of the future."

Lordstown Motors Corp. plans to hire 400 production workers. The company plans to start making electric trucks by next year.

Credit: Lordstown Motors Corp.
A first look at the electric trucks that will be built by Lordstown Motors, a newly formed company that has taken over the shuttered GM facility.

Previous coverage from the Associated Press on Nov. 7, 2019:

GM had employed 4,500 people at the factory near Youngstown just two years ago before it began cutting production and eventually in March ended more than 50 years of car manufacturing there, part of a major restructuring plan.

The closing of the once-bustling factory that last made the Chevrolet Cruz came into the political spotlight last November after Trump criticized the plan and pushed GM executives to either reopen or sell the plant, at one point threatening to cut off all federal subsidies to GM.

Trump took a particular interest in the Lordstown plant, which sits in an area of Ohio that will be important to him in the 2020 election and is where he promised supporters at a rally that manufacturing jobs are coming back to the Midwest.

Terms of the sale and the investors who are behind the deal weren't disclosed by the privately held Lordstown Motors. CEO Steve Burns said Thursday that GM is not among the investors.

Acquiring the plant will allow the company formed just months ago to begin seeking more money so that it can begin production of a new electric pickup truck that will be marketed to commercial customers such as utility companies and municipal governments.

So far, the focus has been on designing the truck, building its management team and buying the plant, he said. "We've raised money to get this far, but the large fundraising starts now," Burns said.

The company, he said, had a unique opportunity to buy an auto plant still equipped welding, stamping and painting operations needed to produce vehicles.

"Normally when these plants shut down, by the time someone buys it, it has been gutted," he said. "To build from scratch would be in the billions."

While production will be limited in the beginning, the plan is to create a hub for electric vehicle manufacturing. "We didn't buy this plant to not fill it up and get to full production," he said.

Burns was a founder of Cincinnati-based Workhorse Group, a fledgling electric truck maker, that will hold a minority stake in a new venture and provide it with technology needed for the new pickup trucks.

Speculation on the plant's future had centered on Workhorse since Trump happily tweeted last May that the company was in talks to buy the huge facility. But there also have been plenty of questions about its financial footing.

Burns said he knows there will be skepticism until Lordstown Motors starts producing an electric pickup truck that customers love.

The trucks, he said, will use hub motors in each wheel, eliminating the need for drive shafts and other parts.

"We're essentially reinventing electric vehicles," Burns said. "The wheel is the motor. The only moving parts on this truck are the wheels. It's a super, simple vehicle."

The deal comes as GM itself is trying to move toward the future with an eye on autonomous and electric vehicles, with plans announced earlier this year to build its own electric pickup truck at a Detroit plant. GM also is building an electric vehicle battery cell factory in the Lordstown area that will be run by a joint venture.

Burns thinks his company can compete for a share of the electric vehicle market by being quicker to adjust to new technology and by targeting commercial, fleet customers who want more than what conventional trucks can supply.

"The sale of the Lordstown plant is an important step for future development in the community," Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said Thursday. "We and our partners can now move to the next phase of attracting new automotive manufacturing jobs to the Mahoning Valley."

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