| The following are some views of the new (in 1926) Buick grey iron foundry. Link for news story on new foundry. Another news story 1927. Story 1927 with photos. Largest foundry story. Just another story from 1927. 1926 story. Another 1927 story. 1954 addition. The Great Mile and a Half 1926 story of Buick. |
| The blue arrow shows the direction and location for the courtyard shown below. |
![]() |
| Building #71 on left and #70 on right. |
| During construction. |
| The 1953 announced addition to the Buick foundry. This would be designated #71-a. |
| All the photos above are from Don Bent's book "A Place Called Buick" |
| Post World War II proposed additions (in red) for the grey iron foundry. Building 70 and 71 were connected in the mid '30s. North is at the left. |
![]() |
| This area is shown below circled in red. This is facing west. Link for pollution scrubber. |
![]() |
| Factory #70 when new. The inset photo is from Don Bent's book "A Place Called Buick". |
![]() |
| This diagram shows the location of the switch engine shown in the photos below. |
| Switch engine at work on July 11, 1989. The truck in the foreground is on Division Street heading south-west at the north end of factory #81. That is factory #10 in the far background. |
| That is the spring plant #03 filling the background. The location is diagrammed below. |
![]() |
| Days of old. |
![]() |
| Factory #81 as it was designated from 1981 to 2011. |
![]() |
Here are the foundry buildings identified. The main buildings #70 and #71 were built between 1926-1927. Building #71-a connected #70 and #71 in 1939. The lighter colored west addition made to #71-a was done in 1953. The safety store where everyone bought their shoes was located just where Division st. starts turning to the east, just under the structure connecting with #31. This addition was shaped at the north-end to follow the curve in Division Street. I never personally went in here myself other than the safety store. If any of these designations are wrong let me know. This view is from 2005 when the factory was known as #81 torque converter plant at Buick. The support structure at the lower right numbered 97 was originally #21 and was the tool grinding shop. It was still #21 in 1980. I'm not sure when that changed. The uses of these different areas are: #71 Cleaning room. The cleaning room is shown below with the two photos of engine blocks going down the line, #71-a was the core ovens, #70 was called the pouring loop and had line 1 & 2 making brake drums with 3, 4 and 5 doing the engine blocks. Area #72 was for sand storage and mixing sand. Keep in mind this would be information from the '60s and '70s. Area #73 was maintenance. Area #74 may be a dock. Area #70-b is the cupola area. Area #70-a was for crane maintenance. The office area was #69-c. Cooling towers were at #69-a. The pattern shop was #69 and 2nd floor was the wood patterns with the first floor being the steel patterns. Factory #70 core room. Go here for 1927 expansion story. Foundry story Links:Factory #70 Raw CastingFactory #70 Before 1953Factory #70 Core RoomBlock Grinding In Factory #70Factory #70 Engine Block PouringFactory #70 POTSFactory #70 |
![]() |
| Days gone by. The next three photos are from the Buick facebook site. |
| 1958 factory #70. |
![]() | ||
The bottom mold is called the drag. The light colored sand is the core.
|
![]() |
| A remembrance from the last V8 made at Buick. |
| Buick supervisor turned Mayor of Flint Floyd McCree visiting old stomping grounds. This is from Ebony magazine July 1967. Original link. |








.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)


1 comment:
This is cool!
Post a Comment