The company's history dates to 1894 and the establishment of a railway workshop for heavy repair of steam locomotives. The original factory was constructed in 16 months on the edge of the city of Zagreb (now within the centre of the expanded city), south of the 1890
Zagreb Glavni railway station, for the
Kraljevskih južnih željeznica (Royal Southern Railway) between
Budapest and the
Adriatic. Housing for plant workers coming from Hungary and Germany was constructed nearby. The factory was expanded and rebuilt in 1911. In 2010 the company moved all its production to a new factory in the Vukomerec industrial area of Zagreb, constructed and equipped at a cost of 650 million
kuna. The city of Zagreb acquired the land of the former factory for €88.2 million. In late 2012 the company declared bankruptcy, due to reduced overseas orders during the
Great Recession, and due to a large reduction in orders from
HŽ Putnički prijevoz. At banckrupcy proceedings in Dec 2012, five enterprises were reported as being interested in the plant:
Electro Motive Diesel, and
National Railway Equipment Company were reported to be interested in parts of the plant relating to locomotive manufacture; investment company
Qatari Blooming Heights LLC was reported to be examining the plant for potential middle-eastern investors; the
China National Corporation For Overseas Economic Cooperation was also said to be interested in acquiring the plant;
HŽ Putnički prijevoz (HŽ Passenger Transport) was reported to be interested in renting part of the plant or equipment to maintain its rolling stock. From 2012 the company continued to manufacture rail vehicles, honouring existing agreements whilst under bankruptcy conditions. In the year following banckrupcy the company achieved a profit of 9.8 million (Kuna) on 300 million revenue whilst having debt claims of over 700 million. The market position of this company in recent decades is that it is the regional leader in design, production and maintenance. In the past, it was a major exporter that exported to all world markets, and employed over 1,400 workers. The company once owned large plots of land near Zagreb's main station (130 thousand square meters), which were sold, and the factory was moved to a new one in Vukomerc. HŽ was a large and significant business partner of this factory, which enabled its existence in times of crisis. The world crisis at the end of the 2000s caused a drop in foreign demand for Gredel's products, due to the fact that the financial possibilities of foreign buyers decreased. In 2011, due to unordered trains that HŽ did not order due to lack of money, TŽV found itself in a problematic situation, because it was left without funds that would enable it to survive at least "on the equipment" through the world crisis. Some circles have accused the Croatian Government of "lacking the will to issue state guarantees for the loan that HŽ should be granted by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development", which is why HŽ has no money, investments have stalled and the company is running out of financial supplies. Despite everything, the company is still a promising business entity, reputable names and reliable products, because its trains are still running on the rails in rich developed countries such as the US, Canada and other countries. ==Products==