WAYNE, Mich. — Ford Motor Co. will invest $550 million to convert its old Michigan Truck Plant into a facility that will build small compact modern cars, the car maker said today.
The retooled facility, which once built sport utility vehicles like the Lincoln Navigator, will now build Ford’s next-generation Focus, expected to roll off the line next year.
The plant also will build a new battery-electric version of the Focus for the North American market. That vehicle is expected to debut in 2011.
The struggling automaker says roughly 3,200 jobs will be created in Michigan because of the plant conversion.
The majority of Ford’s investment will be spent on manufacturing at the site and the remainder on engineering and launch costs.
Ford says it also will consolidate operations at its Wayne Assembly plant and transform two other truck and SUV plants — the Cuautitlan Assembly in Mexico and the Louisville Assembly in Kentucky — as part of the retooling.
“We’re changing from a company focused mainly on trucks and SUVs to a company with a balanced product lineup that includes even more high-quality, fuel-efficient small cars, hybrids and all-electric vehicles,” Mark Fields, Ford’s president of The Americas, said in a statement.
The Dearborn, Mich.-based automaker also will build the same Focus it is offering its North American customers in Europe and Asia.
In addition to Ford’s zero-emission Focus battery-electric car, the company is working on several other product plans. The company is working with Smith Electric to sell a battery electric commercial vehicle for North America in 2010. It also plans to introduce in 2012 a next-generation hybrid vehicle and a plug-in hybrid vehicle.
Michigan, Wayne County, and the city of Wayne have contributed more than $160 million in tax credits and grants to support Ford’s expansion.
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