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Did you know?
It took until 1954 when Innocenti had a
model that went over the 100.000 items produced. This was the popular
Lambretta 150LD Series 2 |
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Innocenti Story
FERDINANDO
INNOCENTI: A SHORT BIOGRAPHY
Ferdinando Innocenti Ferdinando Innocenti was born in Pescia on the 1st
September 1891. His father, Dante Innocenti, a blacksmith, soon moved to the
town of Grosseto, where he opened a hardware store in Via Galilei, while
continuing his activity as a smith. A few years later a second store was
opened in Corso Carducci. Ferdinando, after having completed his 3rd year in
a technical school, started his activity with his father and his
half-brother Rosolino (son of his father’s first marriage) at the head of
the "Ferramenta Innocenti" (1906). Thanks to all the activities, at this
time the family was already well-off.
At 18, young Ferdinando was leading the family enterprise and
started trading iron mainly recovered from the firms engaged in the drainage
of the Maremma marshes. Iron was exchanged with oil, and the oil sale gave
high profits.
In 1920 he started experimenting the possible applications of
iron tubes and in 1923 he moved to Rome where he planned to invest about
half a million lire in the expansion of his activity. As luck would have it,
the Bank where his money was deposited went bankrupt after a few months and
Ferdinando was forced to slow down and devote his time to recover the large
sum of money.
Despite this misfortune, Ferdinando was not discouraged and
soon started to trade the Mannesmann seamless steel pipes produced by
Dalmine. 1928 saw a boom in the building sector and the economic situation
in Italy was flourishing. Agriculture was also growing, thanks to the policy
of the fascist regime and the consequent disappearance of the trade unions’
activity. A negative outlet of the governement policy was however a 11-12%
decrease in wages between 1921 and 1924.
From 1921 to 1931 the fascist regime set out a great plan of
building and remoderning, particularly in the capital. During this decade,
Rome looked like a huge builder’s yard and the general mood was the
"monumental renaissance of the city". Ferdinando seized the opportunity and
in 1926 he opened in Via Porto Fluviale a tube storage warehouse and plant
where he made products for the building activity. The "Fratelli Innocenti",
as the company was called in 1930, started producing tube scaffoldings in
1933. The British Scaffolding’s mounting-dismantling special rapid system
was applied.
In 1931, Ferdinando started building a plant of rain
irrigation in the Castelgandolfo Pope’s Gardens (14 hectares). The water was
supplied by lake Albano. Immediately after, he worked on a similar plant for
the Vatican Gardens, and then he completed a fire-fighting and a
thermoelectric plant. He also used his scaffolding patent for the Cappella
Sistina, where he had the opportunity to show the quality of the project:
the scaffolding was assembled and dismantled in a very short time, and
without interfering with the priceless Michelangelo’s wall paintings. Franco
Ratti count of Desio, a nephew of Pio XI, and Leone Castelli, owner of a
building enterprise working in the Vatican, were providential in allowing
Ferdinando to take part in the project of the Cappella Sistina. The project
was concluded by the end of 1935 and at the beginning of the following year
Ferdinando was charged to mount a 6,000 square metres wide covered complex
with his tubes for the world exhibition of the Catholic Press.
The firm obtained contracts of great prestige, which not only
helped transform the artisanal enterprise in an industrial company but
gained to it more profits which contributed to its enlargement. In 1932 the
industrial production recorded a 27% decrease if compared to 1928, but
Ferdinando Innocenti decided Milan was the right spot to move into with his
activity. The city was in fact very active, the Central Station was then
being built, and the economic crisis was not as bad as elsewhere. In
northern Italy, Innocenti had a privileged position and won many contracts.
In 1929, because of the serious crisis, 300,000 people were recorded as
being out of work, and they increased to more than one million in 1931,
715,000 of whom in the industrial sector.
With the help of Ratti who was then in the Dalmine’s Board of Directors and
had also important positions in other companies, and especially with the
help of his Vatican friendships, Ferdinando won contracts for works in the
Vatican Castelgandolfo. The seat of Fratelli Innocenti was then officially
opened in Via S. Paolo 18.
The 20 workers of 1929 were more than a hundred in 1931, when
the company started the production of mobile and fixed irrigation plants.
The factory in via Pitteri (Milano Lambrate) was built in 1933. Here, the
now tested Innocenti scaffoldings were produced and traded. A new plant was
built in October 1933 on a strip of land between Via Pitteri and the Lambro.
To start production, a number of workers moved in from Rome.
In November 1933 the name of the company changed into "Fratelli
Innocenti Società Anonima per Applicazioni Tubolari in Acciaio". The main
seat was in Rome, Via XX Settembre, the company’s assets 5,000 shares worth
1,000 Italian lire each. Of these, 3,100 belonged to Ferdinando and 1,900 to
Rosolino. To reach this sum the company asked a bond loan worth 5,000,000
lire, split in 5,000 bonds worth 1,000 lire each with a 4% yearly interest.
Sole Administrator, Ferdinando Innocenti.
THE MAN
A
pioneer in his way, Ferdinando Innocenti was modest, close and reserved, but
at the same time had a brave and protective character. He talked very
slowly, just few words in a low tone of voice and brief, separated
sentences. He did not like to show it but was very determined when planning
his actions and when placing the right men at the right spots. One of the
most genial entrepreneurs of the twentieth century, he easily gained
everybody’s approval with a nice smile. He did not love the wordly habits
typical of the successful businessmen of his time. He did not attend parties
nor went to see theatre plays, although he went to the movies at times with
one of his employees and usually selected a cowboy film. But they always
ended up talking business. Very appreciated as a "creator of work", he was
dinamic and constructive. He was described as "a very silent captain of
industry completely out of the regular schemes of his category". Possibly,
he never read a book, but he was always ready to plunge very efficiently
into the company’s bookkeeping and he was very determined when he wanted to
contact people for his activity. In his work, he always strenuously defended
his ideas, but he was also very good at starting new political relations
without disclosing his true opinions. His unique purpose was to gain favours
for his industrial activities.
NATIONAL EVOLUTION OF
THE COMPANY
During the summer 1934 the Soccer World Championship was to
take place in Rome. To enlarge the capacity of the soccer stadios, Innocenti
was assigned by the Italian Government the task of building new stands. This
assignment and the construction during the same year of a variety of stands,
stages, runways and the like gained conspicuous profits to Innocenti’s Milan
factory, which now had 200 workers, partly from Rome.
The company was structured in two seats and two factories, one
in Rome and one in Milan, plus a total of 9 branch offices in Genoa, Naples,
Bologne, Trieste, Grosseto, Cagliari, Palermo, Padua, Florence. The company
had four separated divisions for a variety of products:
- Building activity: electric ware,
scaffolding, high-tension pylons, gates and fences, lamp-posts.
- Agriculture and sports: water
system pipings, spray irrigation plants, fencings for sport units or
training grounds, equipment for gymnasia.
- Industry: thermoelectrical plants;
air, gas and steam tubings; compressed or liquid gas cylinders; pipings.
- Mechanical industry: lorry tubes,
propeller shafts, tubes for motorcars, tubes for gun carriages, hydraulic
rams and cylinders, rolls for glassworks.
This was a purely commercial division, because from the
technical and production point of view there was no difference. The plants
were potentially able to produce the whole range of products. Around this
year (1935), Innocenti was about to concentrate all the production in the
Milan factory.
On the 30th April 1935 the social capital was doubled, during
a meeting of the 11 shareholders, and 5,000 new shares were issued with a
value of 1,000 lire each.
The aggression to Ethiopia was on its way, and it took place
on the 3rd October 1935. During the summer of the same year, the
intervention against the republican government in Spain burst out. The
Italian industry was not prepared to face the outburst of war, but in a
short time the production was converted and by the end of 1936 the
industries producing war equipment were gaining large profits.
THE PRODUCTION OF WAR
MATERIAL
During the war years the Innocenti plants supplied bodies for 150 and 250 kg
airplane bombs, for which cut down tubes were used. Profits in 1935 amounted
to 840,000. To avoid a fiscal drawing applied by tax offices on the basis of
a 1935 law, many manufacturers decided to invest money on the enlargement of
their industrial activities. Innocenti therefore enlarged the industrial
structure, also because the plant was to supply a higher quantity of
bullets. The plants were moved from Rome to Milan, the section MO/1 was
enlarged by diverting the course of the Lambro river and an office building
was built in Via Pitteri. Only the storage warehouse for trading tubes was
left in Rome. With war production, the number of workers had doubled if
compared to 1934. The constant demand for building airplane hangars and the
production of bombshells from (Dalmine) tubes was making the company larger
and larger. And also the respect gained with the various works accomplished
in the Vatican was responsible for this success. In 1933 the IRI –
Institution of Italian Reconstruction – was founded and Dalmine merged with
it. The Innocenti factory already owned a large number of Dalmine shares,
and saw their power grow becoming one of the most important private
shareholders. The rapid growth of Fratelli Innocenti saw Ferdinando creating
a board of directors and a board of auditors with a meeting held on the 16th
April 1936. The most reliable co-operators were asked to take part in the
Board: Rosolino Innocenti, Prof. Giulio Giussani, Ing. Giuseppe Cecchi, Rag.
Vittorio Verdarini. Chairman, Ferdinando Innocenti. The board of auditors
was formed by Avv. Renato Finocchi, Avv. Carlo Jurgens and Dr Giuliano
Mastrogiovanni. On that occasion, the Innocenti plant was given the new name
Innocenti Società Anonima per Applicazioni Tubolari in Acciaio. In 1936, the
empire was proclaimed and war spread out. The Pact of Steel with Germany
requested an even deeper engagement in the production of bullets, that were
now made also for the artillery and the navy. In this year the company
recorded a profit of 877,000 lire, despite the large amount of money
invested in the enlargement. In 1937 profits reached one million lire. The
next year, the Marina plant was built (the present MO/2) and the company
moved a little more east from the Lambro river. Also the "attrezzeria"
(equipment plant) and the Social Service buildings were built (the present
SOCI) and, despite the large amount of money invested, the balance was a
profit of about one and a half million lire.
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INNOCENTI SAFTA
Ferdinando Innocenti, who since 1933 embodied the idea of
tubes, in 1936 decided to build a factory entirely dedicated to their
production. Mussolini at that time wanted to complete an industrial center
at Apuania. This was the place where the factory was made, allowing
Innocenti to obtain the financial means necessary to build the new SAFTA (Società
Anonima Fabbricazione Tubolari Acciaio). Holdings went for a minority to
Dalmine and a majority to Innocenti.
In 1942 the plant that had been started in 1939 for the
construction of seamless tubings was completed and the production was
partially started. The establishment, about 495,000 sq m wide, included 4
longitudinal parallel and three transversal floors, containing 3 rolling
mills of different lengths. 500 workers were employed, the management was
assigned to Ing. Alberto Calmes from Luxembourg. He was particularly
experienced in the construction of tubes and had a deep knowledge of this
activity gained in Germany, which he had left for political reasons. Thanks
to his ability the tubes were produced directly from ingots and not from
expensive rolled sections subsequently welded. However, the production did
not continue after the opening phase because Kesserling, in his retreat,
brought part of the industrial equipment to Germany and partly destroyed the
production units.
In November 1948, after a quick reconstruction, the production
of tubes for oil drills and oil and gas pipes took the start. Dalmine
acquired all the holdings and transformed SAFTA into a second large
production unit. The war events saw a constant engagement of Innocenti at
the construction of plants for producing bullets. A huge bullet factory had
been planned in the Lambrate factory, and it was to be the largest supplier
of the Ministry of War.
On their side, the Ministry of War had planned to split the
productive units in different yards. One of them was to be Guerra I (G I,
War I) at Tor Sapienza, Rome, a complex for the production of about 40,000
bullets a day. Innocenti won the competition against Fiat, Falck etc.,
thanks to a better guarantee on the deadline requested. Completed between
1939 and 1942 as asked, Innocenti won trust and admiration, and the
completion of projects Guerra II and Guerra III in Milan were assigned to
them (between 1940 and 1941).
Guerra II covered a 75,000 sq. m surface and was built in the
area between Via Tanzi, Via Bistolfi, Via Pitteri, Via Trentacoste. The
plant produced sintered copper grenade time rings (on a German patent).
Guerra III was made with the machinery from Guerra I after the US forces’
landing. Its construction started in 1941 to produce (on a German patent)
steel extrusions of shell cases, devised to face the lack of copper. At two
thirds building was interrupted for the events which took place on the 8th
September 1943. The establishment consisted in four huge structures, two of
which had already been equipped with pressing machines supplied by Germans
for the extrusion of shell cases.
PRODUCTION RECONVERTED
In 1939 the Innocenti factory, declared by Starace during his visit on the
27th October 1939 "a model of fascist establishment", was in fact producing
bullets. 90% of the labour was engaged in war production. In 1939 the
Innocenti workers making bullets were only 5.5% of the total of the Italians
producing ammunitions, but the mechanical production of the factory amounted
to 17% of the total in Italy.
In four years, Innocenti multiplied by three the plants and by ten their
production, with 36,000 bullets produced per day in 1943. The people working
in the Milan plant were around 800 in 1938 and increased to 2,000 in 1940,
3,000 in 1941, 6,000 in 1942 and more than 7,000 in the spring of 1943,
mostly unskilled labour, 50% women.
Profits amounted to 2,119,000 lire in 1939, 4,231,000 lire in 1940,
10,118,500 lire in 1941, 12,298,000 in 1942 and 10,783,000 on the 8th
September 1943. The ordinary reserve amounted to 2,200,000 lire, the
extraordinary to 8,468,000. On the 11th March 1940 the managing board
increased the capital from 20 to 50 million lire, on the 8th April 1941 from
50 to 100 million lire. 80,000 shares were issued with a value of 1,000 lire
each. Shareholders from twelve became once more three (80% Ferdinando
Innocenti, 15% Rosolino Innocenti, 5% Paolo Missiroli). By way of gratitude
during the 11th March 1940 meeting, Edmondo Balbo (Italo Balbo’s brother),
the two Innocentis and Paolo Missiroli were elected as members of the Board.
In 1942 Ferdinando Innocenti felt it as a necessity to split the company,
one of the two parts was called Lambro and was charged to run the
establishments, the second one, ATA (Applicazioni Tubolari Acciaio), was to
trade the products. But the war events of 1943 suggested he should wait and
during the meeting held on the 29th April 1943 Ferdinando was appointed
president, sole administrator and general manager of the company.
After the 8th September, the company had to go through the trials of the
German military occupation, even if the opposition from the inside was very
strong. The production of war supplies did not stop.
From Rome, Ferdinando kept following the events involving the company and
plotted constructive and well balanced political relations between German,
RSI, CLN and democratic forces. He also gave financial help to the
partisans. General Poletti was enthusiastic about his brilliant cooperation
and this is one of the reasons why afterwards he was not submitted to the
purge by the Allied forces. From Rome, he was certainly able to catch sight
of a new industrial boom after the end of the war, and in this expenctancy
he was trying to keep the plants as sound as possible in view of their
relaunching. It was not a coincidence if the Allied bombings, on his precise
information, hit only isolated unimportant divisions, whereas most of the
plants were left untouched. Also the slowing of production was an advantage,
as the stock of raw material would later be largely used to cover the
reconstruction expenses.
At the end of the war Ferdinando Innocenti went back to Milan and, after
having called a workers’ meeting, succeeded in obtaining their cooperation.
The reconversion plan set out.
RESTRUCTURATION
AND RECONVERSION
The reconversion plans were conceived
in three stages.
- Production of a low-cost vehicle
for the working class.
- Building of metallurgic machinery
and industrial plants.
- Development of sintering processes.
The vehicle was to be the Lambretta. The idea came from vehicles dropped in
Rome by the British parachuters. Innocenti thought that similar vehicles
could be of great interest in a country where people needed a means of
transport to move quickly. At Guidonia, Innocenti met colonel D’Ascanio, but
they soon found out they had different ideas about the vehicle to be
designed. Colonel D’Ascanio was in fact later engaged by Piaggio, where he
created the "Vespa" scooter. Innocenti contacted another colonel at the
Experimental Center in Guidonia, Ing. Torre, who was to become the "father"
of the Lambretta scooter. In the field of metallurgy Ferdinando Innocenti
wanted to exploit the studies and experience of Calmes at Apuania on the
production of seamless tubings. In the field of sintered materials the idea
was to produce bushings and bearings for electric motors and endothermic
machinery.
This was an ambitious restructuration and reconversion
programme, implying a quality and quantity review of the people employed.
There were at the time 691 skilled workers, specialists and foremen; 969
labourers and unskilled workers; 729 women, 146 delivery-boys, watchmen,
keepers and drivers; 2,252 employees and designers, for a total of 2,767
people: 1,900 at Lambrate, 500 at the Guerra III, 367 at the Guerra II.
About one hundred people were working outside the premises, at ATA etc.
People were to be reduced to about 970, and about 2,000 were
to be dismissed. At the end of 1945 the activity was very scarce – only
around one hundred people were working at building bodies for electrical
motors at Bezzi. This activity did not even cover the expenses, therefore
raw materials were sold, 42,000,000 lire worth of Treasury bonds were sold
in Rome, 3,000,000 lire were recovered with the sale of Dalmine’s holdings.
But to live on, the enterprise needed to recover 175,000,000 lire of
credits, mostly from Germany.
At the beginning of 1946 the workers still were 800, plus 150
employees. On the 12th November 1946 the first financial investment for
reconstruction and production was obtained (300,000,000 lire, which was to
start in 1947. The shortage of coal and electricity caused many delays, but
the third item (sintering) was abandoned because the technology was by the
time obsolete. At the end of 1946 some orders did already arrive: 6 special
machines for Dalmine for 200 tons in total, the building of tube rolling
mills for Jugoslavia (3,200 tons) and 1,150 tons of machinery for Polony.
These goods were paid with raw materials and coal. The
production of scooters had been again delayed because of difficulties in
obtaining supplies and because of the energy shortage. Moreover, the product
was completely new to the company. The first lot of 25 Lambretta scooters
was being completed, when two Lambretta scooters and one van were ready for
the Paris Exhibition. Trade agents were at work in 33 provinces and 3,300
bookings had already been received. The scooters were to be supplied within
March 1948. The aluminum foundry was fully active and the equipment for cast
iron was being prepared. The financial situation was still critical but
improved in April thanks to a loan of a hundred thousand dollars from
Eximbank USA.
However, instead of the 150 daily Lambretta scooters, not more
than 10 were being made, especially because of a faulty organization and the
lack of financial resources. The reorganization of Signor Calbiani planned
to reach a production of 25/30 scooters a day and in a short time, not later
than the following spring, 50 a day. The foundry was fully used to produce
the parts necessary to make the Lambretta, no longer as an autonomous
development as Innocenti had foreseen in his three-point plan. The
establishment in Apuania was rebuilt, and Francesco Innocenti had a
prominent place in the production of tubes, thanks to swift financial
manoeuvres and the founding of new companies. The Lambrate establishment was
runned by Lauro who not only had important acquaintances in the industrial
world, but was also highly respected for his work at Navalmeccanica, an IRI
company.
However, the motor division was still a problem, and Lauro
complained that "the production of scooters is an adventure putting the
company at risk; all the profits of the mechanical division have been used
up and also part of the booking shares". Signor Moro also expressed his
doubts to the managing board: "starting the Lambretta production, because of
a number of mistakes, has costed the company a huge sacrifice", about 500
million over the planned amount.
A choice of projets meant to avoid
possible mistakes in evaluating the real possibilities of placing the
scooters on the market, resulted in the production of a small low-cost
"working-class tractor". Just 20 HP, it could be transformed into a small
van by a national patent, and it was already being built at the Hesemberg in
Monza.
The production of Model M Lambretta (1st type)
reached at the end of 1948 the potentiality of 80-85 daily units, but in
fact only 70 were being produced because of difficulties in covering the
national market. During the fall season, exports began to US and Argentine
with a first lot of 2,000 pieces. At the same time, a 2nd model was being
designed (type B) and this would be produced in 1949 and was to solve the
many faults of the previous model. In fact, this mainly looked like the
first model and essentially kept the same engine, but a new front-wheel
suspension system was to be applied and a rear suspension to be introduced,
a hand gear instead of foot gear and 8-inch wheels instead of 7-inch, plus
metallic colours.
A choice of projets meant to avoid
possible mistakes in evaluating the real possibilities of placing the
scooters on the market, resulted in the production of a small low-cost
"working-class tractor". Just 20 HP, it could be transformed into a small
van by a national patent, and it was already being built at the Hesemberg in
Monza.
The division of heavy mechanics was no worry, because there
were orders to cover the production of one and a half year. Despite this
someone said "in this period we have eaten up 30% in order to finance the
production of Lambretta".
The company now had a truly modern and efficient managing
office. The president Ferdinando Innocenti was supported by Fioramonti and
Fumagalli, Lauro was the general manager and Guani the central manager, Moro
the administrative manager. The mechanical division was run by Rey and the
engine division, since June 1949, by Parolari.
By the end of October 1948, 9,660 Lambretta type A had been produced, and
the making of this model was ceased. The cost account in February 1949
showed a loss of more than 800 million lire. But this was not a problem
according to Ferdinando, because during the first three months of the model
B production the loss had decreased by 200 million, recovered from the lucky
sales of this new model, that, as we said, no longer had the faults of type
A.
Production was now well organized and increased from the 70
daily pieces of January 1949 to around 150 in July. It was difficult to keep
up with demand. Light transport vehicles with the scooter mechanics were
produced since March 1949 at a rhythm of four per day. Also the heavy
mechanics were now working well, especially thanks to a large supply
requested by Austria.
On the 30th June 1949, the following were the people in the
managing board: President Ferdinando Innocenti, managing director Lauro,
councillors Luigi Innocenti (Ferdinando’s son), Giussani and Pestalozzi.
Two new improved models (125 C and faired 125 LC) were
introduced in January 1959. The production of 60,000 scooters was planned,
the double if compared to the previous year. The increase in production
meant the building of a new varnishing plant and the moderning of the
production equipment, especially for the gears and the die-casting of the
aluminum parts. Production of new models started before the processing line
was completed, because no more scooters of the previous model were in stock.
In May, already 5,500 pieces were being made in one month, in July 260 daily
pieces were made, 160 C and 100 LC, equal to 6,200 a month. In 1951
production increased to 7,000 a month. Sales surpassed all expectations and
in 1952 a further increase was decided and the production increased to
8,000. In December 1951 two new types were ready, D and LD, the first one a
low-cost model, the second one faired, more elegant and linear.
Meanwhile, a manufacturing licence for Lambretta scooters had
been granted to NSU in Germany (1950), and in France a similar agreement was
made for an initial production of 13,000 scooters. The majority of the
company’s shares belonged to Innocenti.
With model D, the 8,000 units a month were reached and
surpassed. In 1952 a total of 96,000 vehicles were produced, 16,000 of which
exported. This high production was difficult to place on the national market
and abroad there was some resistance, therefore in 1953 it was decided to
design a cheaper type, model E, and to produce 70/80,000 of this model and
40/50,000 of model LD, with the aim of keeping the turnover at the same
level. But the demand did not reach the expected level, even if there was an
increase of 11% if compared with 1952. 1,063 specimens of the motor van were
produced in 1952 and 4,780 the following year. Exports were 25% of total
production.
In 1955 the Innocenti company obtained one of the largest work
orders ever: in fact, the building of a factory in Venezuela was a huge job,
equal to 350 million dollars (the Fiat factory in Togliattigrad costed the
Russian 920 million dollars). Fiat was also taking part in the tender, and
the two companies joined together. Works started at the beginning of 1956.
Fiat was soon to break the joint-venture, so Innocenti gained the company a
40 billion income. The works were completed even if the Democratic
Government, after having ousted the leader Jimenez, decided that the cost
was too high and therefore would not pay. But the following government was
on easier terms with Innocenti and finally respected the agreement.
The scooter production in 1955 reached a good level, even if
not as good as in 1953. At the beginning of the year a high-wheel 48 cc
two-speed motor-bicycle was launched ("Lambrettino 48"), with a production
of 6,000 units and 22,000 units in 1956. Increase in total production
(scooters + motor-bicycles) amounted to 20%.
From 1958 to 1963 Italy experienced a great industrial boom. In 1961 there
was an increase in production of 97% if compared to 1953. Innocenti
accordingly increased production: given a production of 100 motor vehicles
in 1957, it increased to 103.5 in 1958, to 120 in 1959 and to 148 in 1960.
In the heavy mechanic industry 2,800 tons of machinery were
made in 1950, increased to 21,550 in 1960. Profits at the end of 1960 were
59% higher if compared to 1950. The capital stock increased by 2,000%. Much
of the increase was due to the Venezuela "business". Ferdinando’s son Luigi,
who was vice-president since 1958 and who in fact always lived in his
father’s shadow, succeeded in accomplishing his longlife dream: he enforced
his decision – and this was the only occasion in his life – to build a
motor-car. This change was made necessary in order to employ the large
income obtained in the previous years.
In 1957 Ing. Torre had already been asked to design a small
motor car, but then Parolari (Lauro’s favourite) took Torre off the project
because he wanted to be the only one leading the motoring division. In
1957/58, Torre designed a prototype of utility car which could be totally
built in the Innocenti plant, but again the project was abandoned at the
beginning of the following year, as an agreement was being made with
Gogomobil Iseria for the construction of a 400 cm3 small car. Moreover,
Innocenti did not want to annoy Fiat in the field of heavy mechanics.
In 1959 BMC of Birmingham was contacted to realize an Austin
900 cm3 saloon car: the A40. The agreement included the assembling and
varnishing of the parts supplied by BMC. This was a 7-year lasting
uncomplete and unfavourable agreement for Innocenti. In a year or little
more the A40 processing line was completed and at the end of 1960 production
started with about 100 cars per day. The assembling line was certainly
obsolete, if compared to Fiat’s.
In 1961/62 also a pressing division for producing parts was
ready, for the A40, the roadster and the Bertone coupé with the same
mechanics as A40. The total production amounted to 20,900 pieces in 1962 and
increased in 1963 when the production of IM3 in the regular and super models
started, so at the end of the year it amounted to 30,600 units.
In 1966 at the age of 85 Commendator Ferdinando Innocenti –
who had certainly been one of the most brilliant and genial captains of
industry in the world – died, and his son Ing. Luigi succeeded him at the
head of the company.
THE BEGINNING OF THE
END
This change at the head of the company took place in a
particular period of the political, social and financial history of Italy.
Politics
The feature of this political stage is the scarce stability of the
governments and we can say that the various parties and the political class
in general were more interested in creating power centres than in
maintaining and increasing the large productive industrial thrust known as
"economic miracle", thanks to which Italy had reached a very high standard
and had acquired an important position in the international field. The
political administrations, conditioned by the left parties, were not able to
exploit the growing capacities offered by industry.
Trade Union
One must note that Innocenti since the beginning has always been a firm
strongly involved in politics, and the trade union was capable of mobilizing
labourers in just a few hours. Better and more human working conditions and
real advantages were asked for. The "equality" flag-waving often served as
an excuse to transform simple and realistic demands into a class struggle.
This unrest damaged production and took away resources from industrial
research and investment. Almost every week, the firm was to endure strikes
and had to give in to trade union blackmail. Necessarily, the trade union
had an influence on the company’s decisions.
Economy and market
Most traditional scooter users turned to small cars. In 1967 the Fiat 500
was very comfortable and reliable in its class and was sold at the very low
price of 475,000 lire, whereas the SX 200’s price was 219,000 lire! The
popular Turin-made small car also had the advantage of a very low
consumption, not far from that of Lambretta scooters. Demand for scooters
was slowly but relentlessly decreasing, and was not sufficient to support
such a differentiated production and the development of new projects. Total
production of vehicles, including scooters, motor-bicycles and vans, from
the 144,000 yearly units in 1963 gradually lowered to 107,150 in 1966,
84,885 in 1967, 82,121 in 1968 and 62,209 in 1969.
The company
With the death of the charismatic figure of the founder, who had always
succeeded in controlling his cooperators, they stopped working synergically
and started trying to gain leadership in the company’s management. The "old
pioneer" felt the scooter as his own creature, but this was not the case for
the strong and capable managers who were left in his place, so they did not
develop the production as the situation demanded. The production was now far
too expensive for the times. At Piaggio, that suffered of the same market
situation, the lines were instead quickly automated. In fact this company
succeeded in overcoming the difficult times, thanks also to a large
financial help from Fiat.
Little by little the members of the managing staff who were in
some way bound to the legendary Lambretta and wistfully proposed its
development, were losers against those who considered motorcars as the
unique opportunity to relaunch the company. No company ever succeeded in
switching from the motorcycle to the motorcar production. Some of them, for
instance Triumph, BMW and DKW, were thinking of cars right from the start
and therefore developed their technology and research in parallel.
In 1967 Nuccio Bertone was assigned the task of improving the
Lambretta design. Model DL was soon produced (January 1968) in the
125-150-200 cc models. Also a new 50 and 75 cc motor-bicycle with mechanics
derived from J 50 was produced. This was also designed by Bertone and its
production started in March 1968. Despite this last attempt to renew the
Lambretta’s design, in 1968 the Innocenti managing staff was already aware
that ceasing the scooter production was only a matter of time.
In 1971 Luigi Innocenti who had trouble with his health and
could not be active as the difficult situation demanded, left the head of
the company. The last model (DL) ceased to be made in April of the same
year, and J 50 the following year. The various models of vans were made in a
reasonable number until the month of December. Total of vehicles made in
1971 is 11,222 – 3,400 of which DL, 2,153 J 50 in the De Luxe and Special
models, and 5,669 vans, 72 of them being completed in the first ten days of
January 1972.
The end
The Innocenti company, a leader in the field of the two-wheel vechicles and
with a huge know-how derived from research (that certainly surpassed the
technology placed on the marked), was sold to Leyland and the heavy
mechanics division became Innse (Innocenti Sant’Eustachio). A company was
therefore destroyed by the combined action of the market situation, trade
unions, the short-sightedness of the political class and an unfortunate
heir, leaving free hand to the slow but unbending Japanese penetration.
Plants were emptied and the assembly lines of the last model were sold to
India (Scooterindia) where the Lambretta models DL 150 and 200 were to be
made for many more years.
In the Lambrate establishment motorcars were made with the
Innocenti brand and with BMC engines (the same as the Mini’s) and later on
with Japanese engines (Daiatsu). During this last and not much enlightened
De Tomaso’s management, the plant also hosted the Maserati assembly line and
succeeded in placing on the market many models of a very good car, the 2000
cc two and four-door, roadster and coupé Maserati Biturbo. But this car was
not a success, an event more due to a faulty advertising than to the
qualities of the car itself. The production was then moved to Modena and in
the Innocenti premises every production activity was ceased. The workers
were partly employed by Maserati, some of them by public institutions, some
others were encouraged to an early retirement or in any case to resign.
When the production of the Lambretta was ceased also in India,
it was called "Grand Prix" and its design had been widely modified. The
die-casts and equipment used for over 25 years were offered to the highest
bidder, but being the amounts offered too low, the assembly lines were left
to themselves and in time strongly weathered.
The brand Innocenti and the agents were taken up by Fiat and
are today used to identify some of their motorcars, mainly produced in
Brazil.
The area that once belonged to Innocenti, by this time
engulfed by the city that had seen this industry grow, enlarge and then die,
has been the object of several plans. One of these, ironic as it may be, is
an unconsciuos desecration of an establishment that once was one of the most
modern in Europe, and it is strongly backed up by some people who probably
never were so lucky as to own a Lambretta scooter: it is the plan for a
large rubbish recycling plant, uselessly opposed by the inhabitants of the
area.
People who, for various reasons, have had something to do with
the Innocenti company in the past, will in any case remember it for the
Lambretta scooter. There are and there will always be in every part of the
world many owners and fans of this scooter, which is nowadays a cult object
to be saved from destruction.
(source lambretta.it) |