With the founding of
Horch and
Audi in 1904 and 1909 respectively, Zwickau became the cradle of the Saxon automobile industry. Following the
partition of Germany after the
Second World War, and the formation of
East Germany (DDR), all private enterprise was seized by the government, which included the former Audi and Horch factories in Zwickau, with their parent
Auto Union formally relocating to
Ingolstadt in
West Germany in 1949, from where the modern Audi company evolved.
VEB Sachsenring was established by the DDR in the 1950s to manufacture a national automobile - the
Trabant - out of the former Auto Union works. Between 1978 and 1982, VEB Saschenring constructed a new factory on the outskirts of Zwickau in nearby Mosel, as the old facilities had increasingly become inadequate. Due to the traditions of automotive engineering in the region and because of the skilled workers potential, Volkswagen decided as the first large enterprise of the Federal Republic to build up a completely new plant in Saxony and provided for it considerable investments. As a result, other investors settled in the region. Already in the
final phase of the GDR the
Trabant 1.1 was built in the newer Mosel plant from 1989 with a four-cylinder four-stroke engine manufactured under VW license. The production was discontinued in 1991, because parallel to this one the mass production of the
Volkswagen Polo Mk2 had already started on 21 May 1990 in the Mosel factory. On 15 February 1991, the production of the
Volkswagen Golf Mk2 began parallel to the Polo production. Volkswagen also began construction of a major expansion of the Mosel plant following
German reunification, with the old Saschenring site in the centre of Zwickau being largely demolished - only the historic Audi factory building was retained and now houses the
August Horch Museum Zwickau. The new expanded manufacturing plant was completed in 1993. The suburb Mosel was incorporated into Zwickau on 1 January 1999. In 2007, they officially introduced the new factory designation
Volkswagen-Fahrzeugwerk Zwickau. Since production began in 1990, around 6 million Volkswagen vehicles have been delivered. On 11 May 2004 the festive event for the 100th anniversary of the founding of Horch. High-ranking persons from politics and economics appreciated the scientific and technical achievements of the car makers from southwest Saxony in their greetings. Directly adjacent is also a factory of the supplier
GKN Driveline, which operates out of the old VEB Saschenring part of the plant that was constructed in the late 1970 to manufacture Trabants. In 2019 the factory was completely converted to the production of
electric cars. The last
internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicle rolled off the Zwickau plant on 26 June 2020. The car is a seventh generation Golf R Estate with 2.0-litre petrol engine in Oryx White Pearl Effect. It is the 9,512,001th ICE vehicle produced in the plant, effectively ended 116 years of ICE vehicle assembly in Zwickau-Mosel. Production of the
Audi Q4 e-tron began at the plant in 2021, marking the first time that Audis have been manufactured in Zwickau in the post-war period. == Current production ==