Integral Coach Factory
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Started in 1952, the Integral Coach Factory (ICF) is located in Perambur, a suburb near Chennai, India. Its primary products are rail coaches. Most of the coaches manufactured are supplied to Indian Railways, but it has also manufactured coaches for railway companies in other countries, including Thailand, Burma, Taiwan, Zambia, Philippines, Tanzania, Uganda, Vietnam, Nigeria, Mozambique and Bangladesh.
The coach factory provides a number of different coaches primarily for the Indian Railways, primarily first and second class coaches, pantry and kitchen cars, luggage and brake vans, self propelled coaches, electric, diesel and mainline electric multiple units, metro coaches and Diesel Electric Tower Cars (DETC), Accident Relief Medical Vans (ARMV), Inspection Cars (RA), Fuel Test Cars, Track Recording Cars etc.
[edit] History
The Integral Coach Factory setup in 1951 with the help of M/s Car and Elevator Manufacturing Corporation Ltd., Schlieren-Zurich (Switzerland). It was inaugurated by the then Prime Minister of India Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru on 02 Oct 1955. Production began in a modest manner in 1955 with the manufacture of seven third class coach shells. Today the coach factory produces more than 1100 coaches of more than 170 varieties.
[edit] See also
[edit] External link
- Integral Coach Factory (ICF) official website