After his death, the company was led and expanded by his son
Albert Borsig. On the occasion of the completion of the 1000th locomotive, a large celebration with many prominent guests was held, among them the explorer
Alexander von Humboldt. At this time, the company that had started out with 50 workers, had 2800 employees. It continued its expansion, and moved some part of its production to
Zabrze in
Silesia in 1862. In 1872, Borsig was the largest locomotive producer in Europe. Albert Borsig co-founded the
Maschinenfabrik Deutschland on the
Köln-Mindener Eisenbahn line in
Dortmund but the most successful chapter in the Borsig business history ended with Albert's death in 1878. The company continued to be led mostly by Borsig family members and continued to build large numbers of locomotives, but it began to lose market share to other traffic-related companies. The company moved to Tegel, a former suburb of Berlin. The works was inaugurated in 1898. The Tegel works area was one of the most modern facilities in Germany at that time. It had its own harbour where the ships brought the material for the locomotives. The works itself had long road with every production step at its place. The end of this production lane was the BORSIG Gate. The brand new locomotives left the works through this gate. The company also developed new products that are still part of the current manufacturing program: pressure vessels and compressors. The Great Depression made an end the success of BORSIG as a private company. By 1930, the company was on the verge of
liquidation, the locomotive business was saved by a merger with
AEG. Borsig built a number of famous locomotives, among which was the world speed record holder
DRG Class 05, the first steam locomotive to hit 200 km/h. The last of a total of 16,352 locomotives was built in 1954. The rest of the company went to Rheinmetall. After World War II, the company was called Borsig AG, owned by
Rheinmetall (as Rheinmetall-Borsig) and later by
VIAG, a company owned by the German Federal Republic. In 1970, Borsig was sold to the private company
Deutsche Babcock AG, later known as Babcock Borsig AG, industrial steam boilers and nuclear power equipment.
21st century In July 2002, Borsig had to reorganize due to the insolvency of its parent company, Babcock Borsig AG, Oberhausen. In 2004, Borsig bought ZM Zwickauer Maschinenfabrik, a manufacturer of reciprocating compressors and blowers, today known as BORSIG ZM Compression GmbH, situated in
Meerane, Saxony. In 2006, Borsig bought the industrial boiler manufacturer DIM KWE, today BORSIG Boiler Systems GmbH. Today the BORSIG Group consists of six companies: • BORSIG GmbH, the parent company, Berlin, • BORSIG Process Heat Exchanger GmbH, Berlin, manufacturer of pressure vessels and heat exchangers, • BORSIG ZM Compression GmbH, Meerane, manufacturer of compressors and blowers, • BORSIG Membrane Technology GmbH, Gladbeck and Rheinfelden, manufacturer of membrane technology such as emission control systems or vapour recovery units, • BORSIG Boiler Systems GmbH, Hamburg, industrial boilers and power plant engineering, • BORSIG Service GmbH, Berlin and Gladbeck, industrial service. In 2008 the whole BORSIG Group got a new owner, the KNM Group Berhad,
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The actual product and service programme of the BORSIG Group consists of pressure vessels, heat exchangers, process gas waste heat recovery systems, quench coolers, scraped surface exchangers, reciprocating compressors for process gases, turbo compressors for process gases, reciprocating compressors for CNG filling stations, blowers and blowers systems, compressor valves, membrane technologies, such as emission control units, vapour recovery systems, gas conditioning, advanced separations, industrial boilers, power plant engineering, power plant services and industrial services. == See also ==