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Daewoo (1982–2002) Subsidiaries. SsangYong (1998–2000) Daewoo Motors (/ ˈdeɪwuː / DAY-woo) was a South Korean automotive company established in 1937 as "National Motors". The company changed its name several times until 1982 when it became "Daewoo Motors" following its acquisition by the Daewoo Group.
Daewoo Motor Sales, an auto sales company sold Daewoo but also GM cars and others in South Korea (Sub-branch: Architectural Iaan Div., SAA-Seoul Auto Auction) Daewoo Bus, is a manufacturer of buses. headquartered in Busan, South Korea, established in 2002. These buses are primarily used for public transportation.
Daewoo-based models. Also marketed as the Chevrolet Aveo/Kalos/Lova, Holden Barina, Pontiac Wave /G3, and the Suzuki Swift+. Also marketed as the Suzuki Forenza, Chevrolet Optra/Lacetti, Holden Viva and Buick Excelle /Excelle HRV. Also marketed as Holden Cruze, is the South Korean version of Chevrolet Cruze.
Chevrolet Spark. The Chevrolet Spark (Korean: 쉐보레 스파크) is a city car manufactured by General Motors 's subsidiary GM Korea from 1998 to 2022. The vehicle was developed by Daewoo and introduced in 1998 as the Daewoo Matiz (Korean: 대우 마티즈). In 2002, General Motors purchased Daewoo Motors, which was marketing the vehicle with ...
GM Korea Company. GM Korea Company[b] (Korean: 한국지엠주식회사) [c] is the South Korean subsidiary of multinational corporation General Motors and the third largest automobile manufacturer in South Korea. GM Korea's roots go back to the former Daewoo Motors vehicle brand, which was split from its parent company, Daewoo, in 2002. [1]
The Daewoo Nubira (J100 platform) was released in 1997 reflecting Daewoo's new found design and manufacturing process. Production took under 30 months by ex-Porsche and BMW engineering chief Dr. Ulrich Bez (later of Aston Martin), with Daewoo's growing in-house R&D network in Korea, Worthing and Munich collaborating with the world's best engineering consultancies. [6]
Daewoo Lanos. The Daewoo LeMans is a compact car, first manufactured by Daewoo in South Korea between 1986 and 1994, and between 1994 and 1997 as Daewoo Cielo — a car mechanically identical to the LeMans, differentiated only by its modified styling cues. Like all Daewoos preceding it, the LeMans took its underpinnings from a European Opel design.
Holden Acadia (seven seat) The Holden Captiva is a crossover SUV that was produced from 2006 to 2018 by GM Korea (previously known as Daewoo). The car was sold in Australia and New Zealand under the Holden brand and derives from either the Chevrolet Captiva or Opel Antara, depending on the variant and year. Holden Captiva (2006–2009; 2016–2018)