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Jaguar's business was founded as the Swallow Sidecar Company in 1922, originally making motorcycle sidecars before developing bodies for passenger cars. Under the ownership of SS Cars, the business extended to complete cars made in association with Standard Motor Company, many bearing Jaguar as a model name. The company's name was changed from ...
In September 2013, Jaguar Land Rover announced an additional 1,700 jobs and £1.5 billion investment at its facility in Solihull. The money was to be spent on designing systems to allow the chassis of future models to be made out of aluminium; the first of these would be a new mid-sized sports saloon car to be introduced in 2015. [26]
On 15 October 2010 it was announced that an agreement had been made between Jaguar Land Rover management and union bosses to save all three Jaguar Land Rover production plants from closure. Jaguar Land Rover have agreed that all plants will remain open until at least 2020 in a deal with the Unite the Union , which represents the majority of ...
In 2021, Jaguar first announced that it would ditch internal combustion engines and go all-in on EVs. And in 2024, the nearly century-old Jaguar made major moves to ramp up that transition. Jaguar ...
Unveiled last night from glitzy Art Basel Miami, Jaguar’s new coupe, dubbed the Type 00, features what the brand believes is pure Jaguar but in a dramatic, art deco-inspired overall design. Most ...
The plant has now been designated as a "centre for excellence" for aluminium body technology. Production of the Jaguar XE, the first non-4x4 vehicle to be produced at the plant since 1981, began on 13 April 2015, and was followed by production of the Jaguar F-Pace in 2016. [10]
Jaguar has long been the weakest link within the Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) group, which also makes Range Rovers and Land Rover Defenders. Since 2018, sales have plunged from 180,000 to just 67,000 ...
Jaguar Land Rover Halewood is a Jaguar Land Rover factory plant in Halewood, Merseyside, England, and forms the major part of the factory complex in Halewood which is shared with Ford of Britain [citation needed] who manufacture transmissions at the site, and who opened the site in 1962 as their Halewood Body & Assembly plant.