Sneaking Inside Completely Intact Abandoned Car Factory
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- Опубликовано: 12 янв 2024
- All kinds of car models were made in this now abandoned car factory. From the iconic Fiat 500 to the legendary Fiat Panda. Since the closure everything had been left behind to decay, giving a unique insight. In this episode we sneak inside this highly secured factory to discover the hidden remains.
Note: the factory has been sold since the filming of this episode, the factory is NOT accessible anymore today and undergoing demolition.
///English subtitles///
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I just checked and my classic Fiat 500L from 1972 was made in this factory! 🎉
It's crazy to see all the papers on desks. Like workers did have an emergency evacuation & never came back. I also see a lot of stuff that could have been sold in auctions for a few bucks instead of being left to rot or be stolen.
Great video and filmed with care, dedication and respect. Love your work. I visited the old FIAT factory just outside Turin and it has been kindly restored and renovated.
Thanks man! I'm guessing the old Lingotto plant? :)
For all too many this video hits home to so many who have lost their job due to plant closure. I have once been part of that. After a lifetime of work, every factory in which I worked suffered the same except one and it's days are most likely numbered. Sadly, this is how things are today.
This is perhaps the reasoning of your left wing socialist stupid uneducated view on things. Fiat has to close it because they just didn't want to work the Sicilians!!! They could have also build the factory in the north where the Italians work very hard. But no, it was planned to bring work to Sicily. But... But... but... Your romantic workers had something else to do.
This is perhaps the reasoning of your left wing socialist stupid uneducated view on things. Fiat has to close it because they just didn't want to work the Sicilians!!! They could have also build the factory in the north where the Italians work very hard. But no, it was planned to bring work to Sicily. But... But... but... Your romantic workers had something else to do.
This is perhaps the reasoning of your left wing socialist stupid uneducated view on things. Fiat has to close it because they just didn't want to work the Sicilians!!! They could have also build the factory in the north where the Italians work very hard. But no, it was planned to bring work to Sicily. But... But... but... Your romantic workers had something else to do.
This is perhaps the reasoning of your left wing socialist stupid uneducated view on things. Fiat has to close it because they just didn't want to work the Sicilians!!! They could have also build the factory in the north where the Italians work very hard. But no, it was planned to bring work to Sicily. But... But... but... Your romantic workers had something else to do.
This is perhaps the reasoning of your left wing socialist stupid uneducated view on things. Fiat has to close it because they just didn't want to work the Sicilians!!! They could have also build the factory in the north where the Italians work very hard. But no, it was planned to bring work to Sicily. But... But... but... Your romantic workers had something else to do.
I worked there myself as a young engineer from northern Milano for six weeks in the spring 1984! Nice memories a lovely environment and hard working people. It really makes you wonder why it had to end like this..
Amazing! I have rusty old fiats and its crazy to think the rusting could have started there! Shame it's being demolished.
When, as a car, you are born directly next to the sea in all that salty air, it sets you up for a rusty future....!
Most cars from the 70s rust.
Another top-notch video about an abandoned factory. Keep up the good work!
That was so cool!!! Thanks for showing us this historic building!
Why don't they make a museum instead of demolishing.
For the same reason most things are done/not done.
Money.
Land is worth too much
Water front property
How many people a year do you think are going to visit an abandoned factory?
Crowd fund the museum?
I'm from Italy and I remember when on the news they kept on talking about the closure of this factory and how a lot of employees where going to lost their jobs. I remember they protested for days or weeks. It was very sad knowing each one of them had to provide for their families and without their job they would struggle a lot. It's a little sad history of Italy someone would never forget. Hope all those employees did well in the end
Thank you for sharing...I love videos like this. Keep up the good work.
The abandoned factory of Bugatti in Modena isnt as complete but there are period photos and the shells of the buildings are still there today.
Absolutely amazing, great video!
Thanks!
Very interesting. On 3:44 these hanging yellow tools on either side of the assembly line were used for attaching the wheel bolts. They can tighten all the screws on a wheel at the same time.
That’s amazing so much tooling has been left behind. A dedicated group of people could probably manufacture cars again.
Wow, what a great video! So sad that the factory will be pulled down. An amazing history soon to be turned to dust 😢
Great video! Even i live in Sicily i didn't know this factory
It's funny for me how you've done two videos on abandoned factories in cars owned in my family. First the ex Pininfarina factory, which I owned a Brera produced there. Then this factory where the last Fiat 500's were produced, my dad currently owns a '75 500R which I'm guessing would've been produced there. Love these videos!
Thanks! Cool that you have a 500 produced from that factory!
That was very interesting thanks for uploading
Excellent video.
Wow thanks for your efforts, it was a nice tour, glad you didn’t get caught
Very interesting video. Keep it up!
Thanks man!
Great video! I am gear head and have had two Cinquecento. A '72 and a '74 as well as a '83 Panda.
Thanks, great cars you had in the past!
Wow… what a fantastic look inside the plant. Thanks. Per (DK)
I like the Hot Wheels style garage car ramp at the front. I was expecting to see a winch operated car lift and foam hair roller car wash, lol. Great video as always fellas.
Thanks!
Yeah that spiral ramp sticks out, but where does it go? It seems to just end on the roof and have no real purpose other than to look good. Maybe Fiat wanted some " Lingotto" style in there :)
@@Rockport1911 I came to the comments to find the answer to this as I agree...it goes nowhere. So odd
Such a shame to see places with a history like this go. Good thing you didnt get caught, my hands were all sweaty when u were hiding. Those loud bangs were eerie.
The Banging It was the Ghosts of Car Production.
Amazing Video 👍👍👍
Thanks man!
Incredible video! I'm not sure but I think my 1972 Fiat 500L might have been made in this factory! I would have loved to look around the place, thank you for having the bravery to make this video.
I do have a 1972 Fiat 500L and I discovered it was built here!
I just checked and mine was built there!@@riccardojo4627
No, only 500 R was built in Termini Imerese
@@vincenzodeluca2395 I have a list of chassis numbers that were built there and mine is within that list. So if that is wrong then I don't know which factory mine was built in.
top video, thanks
Very interesting. Good job!
Thanks!
Awesome video
Very interesting. I used to know a director of Fiat who worked in Baker Street in London during that time. He used to drive his X19 up there every day. That's a long way from Sicily though.
Great video over a nice place. I like the new intro.
Thanks, glad to hear!
It was the car factory with less recalls in Europe. Thansk European Union. Now we have to buy German and Spanish cars and the Agnelli family left the country with our money.
Ja dat is de EU overal waar die zich mee bemoeien gaat naar de haaien
3:47 here we see a tool that tightens the wheel bolts (or nuts)… you are right about the cars being nearly completed here…
Good Vid!!
Thumb+Subscription.
Greetings from the Netherlands, Henk.
Dankjewel Henk!
@@ForgottenBuildings You’re welcome!!!!
Very good and fitting sound track!
Thanks man!
nice vid again! :)
Thanks!
Just lovely thanks regards Andre Netherlands
Well done, Braveheart 👍🏻
First YT content that had me on the edge of my seat. I have subscribed, and look forward to future content. Glad you escaped. Stay safe! 31 01 2024 UK
Thanks man, glad to hear you enjoyed it!
Amazing place and vídeo!!!!
Very sad is this get demolished.
Thanks man!
Very interesting.....well done.Its a shame it cant be put back in producing something !!.
Wow amazing. It's a pity that you couldn't film more
Cool and interesting video. I also loved the pronounciation of certain words: „fraudschderschs“ 😂
Really appreciate your hard work, I've been in the motor industry for long time 47 plus years, I really enjoyed this, I'll be checking your video's out 😊🇦🇺🤝😎✌👍🍻🍺🍻🍺😎
I had a fiat brava 131 4 door. Rented one in Puerto Rico. Liked the look and handling so i bought one
So sad that such an enterprize is being demolished.
Thank the Euro currency. The lira was weak so Fiat's were cheap. The euro wiped out the advantage
Cool video..
Fantastic video and a valuable historic record of Italy & Fiat’s industrial heritage, well done👍 . Can’t find a comment someone made about the factory origin and the Agnelli family leaving Italy with loads of money. What’s that all about? 😢🤷♂️
That's awesome! A pink Mercedes definitely stands out and adds a touch of glam to your ride. Wardens Park sounds like a great spot to take your car for a spin. Have you been able to take any cool pictures with your pink Mercedes 🎉 Road
Que vídeo sensacional! Se você viesse ao Brasil, o que você mais veria são fábricas abandonadas...
Obrigado, está lindo!
The only reason Fiat would leave the factory with so much equipment is it thought it would just temporarily mothball it. Little did they know it would be the end of it. So it only been dis-used since 2011. Still very rare for something like this not already been badly vandalized.
Muito triste ver um império desse aí parado ocioso,meu primeiro emprego foi na Fiat automóveis,betim mg tive orgulho de trabalhar lá quase 10anos,melhor empresa que eu trabalhei na minha vida,eu admiro esse logo marca Fiat, se Deus quiser quem sabe um dia essa unidade volta a gerar empregos e sonhos
Esquece. Estes países estão mandando suas fabricas todas pro leste europeu e pra China. Lamentável.
Very interesting....
Somebody ought to able to make use of that facility for something.
1:44 Parts of it look still in use. The desk still has stationary on it and a pair of rubber gloves. I find it hard to believe, it was abandoned like that. There’s also no dust,on the table tops.
It would be neat to have the three assembly lines of the main cars assembled there. Each model car have stages of the car being built as a museum.
I worked for a company 28 years and they closed down all the production you know it's a really eerie feeling when you walk through and everything is quiet
that was interesting
As a german I always have to smile when " massive" car factories are shown :) Nice time capsule, iam suprised how many machines are still left behind, maybe they where waiting for another product that never came. Unfortunately with the current switch to EV´s some smaller Car assembly factories in europe will close down as everyone of them fight for funding and new models...
We’ll see how massive they are vs the ones being built in China 🇨🇳 🙃
What does a German smile look like?
It certainly looks like the idea with this factory seems to have been to temporarily close it and maybe retool it for a different model car or maybe even to sell the complete factory. But it obviously wasn't ever reopened. Leaving pretty much a complete assembly line intact doesn't make much sense otherwise.
Scammers funneled €60M out under the pretense of producing electric cars in this factory.
@tjroelsma
The location was geographically and logistically remote.
The whole area can now be re-imagined and repurposed, bringing new vibrant opportunities.
This car production line should be utilised as it provides many people a source of living
GOOD!
Thanks!
Fraud in Sicily…who would have thought! 😏
Fraud in Italy who would have thought 😂
This is one of the larger examples of what happened to thousands of factories and businesses in Sicily and Calabria. Certain “organizations” beginning with M on the island and ‘N on the southern mainland became so greedy in their endeavour that in time it became unsustainable to keep going while being coerced into “paying for security”.
I can infer what M stands for but I am not sure what N stands for?
ndrangheta
Mafia. There I said it.
@@daveb9445 ah, thank you
Ndrangheta
Shhhh!
Doet toch zeer, zo een rijke geschiedenis van automobielproductie te zien verdwijnen. Het mocht toen al massaproductie geweest zijn, er zat toch een unieke sfeer in die Italiaanse fabrieken die tot in de eindproducten leefden .... jammer, komt niooit meer terug 😭😭😭
Kort bij huis VDL Nedcar in Born dat zelfs groter is dan deze ex Fiat fabriek gaat ook voor 75% dicht in 2024
Alleen de pershal en een groot magazijn/laaddok blijft operationeel om plaat delen te maken voor diverse auto fabrikanten in Europa.
wow that is sad and tragic
Rica historia ❤
These Fiats are now produced in
Poland by cheap polish workers, that Work for a few Zloty even at Weekends. Built cheap - sold expensive.
It's Sicily and you are in an abandoned place, in the middle of nowhere , at your place I wouldn't be afraid of be running by security guards , but of people who are much less willing to let you leave alive, because you arrived at the wrong place at the wrong time, it's the biggest risk on this damn shi**y island.
126 was never produced in Termini Imerese, it began production in Cassino (south of Rome) before moving to Bielsko Biala in Poland, 500 was produced in Termini until the end of the seventies when they reverted to the production of the Panda 😀
Fiat 126 Assembly :
Cassino, Italy
Termini Imerese, Italy
Tychy, Poland (Polski Fiat)
Kragujevac, Yugoslavia (Zastava)
Graz, Austria (Steyr Puch)
The Fiat 126 was produced until 1979 at Fiat's factories in Cassino and Termini Imerese - with a total production of 1.352.912 in Italy. The Fiat 126 was also manufactured under license by Zastava in Yugoslavia. In Austria it was briefly assembled by Steyr Puch as the successor to the successful Puch 500, with assembly until 1975 - and production of 2069 units.
Most 126s were produced in Bielsko-Biała, Poland, as the Polski Fiat 126p, where production continued until 2000. In many markets Fiat discontinued sales of the 126 in 1993 in favor of their new Cinquecento with its front engine. With a length of 3,05 meters, the total production of the 126 reached almost 4,7 million units. In Poland, the car became a cultural icon and was nicknamed Maluch, meaning “the little one” or “toddler,” which eventually became an official model name in 1997 when it appeared on the back of the car.
The FIAT 126 was produced in Termini Imerese !!!!!!!
Fiat 500 - 1970-1975 = 207,988 units produced
Fiat 126-1975-1979 = approximately 200,000 units!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Fiat Panda - 1980-1992 = approximately 2,300,000 units
Fiat Punto - 1993-1999 = approximately 900,000 units
Fiat Punto II - 1999-2005 = approximately 350,000 units
Lancia Ypsilon - 2005-2011 = 374,722 units
heel mooi,denk dat ze niet zo flauw zijn als ze je daar pakken...
Shame that the building couldn't be re used . I don't know anything about what happened here . Poor people who lost their jobs because of some greedy people.
Looks like major recycle is needed
I have passed this factory many of times driving down to Cefalu i even know people who have worked there
The Classic 500 should return to production as an EV, in this factory.
Very, very sad indeed!
Why this channel has only 15.3k subscribers
I'd surely bring a small cinewhoop drone with me, beside the camera drone...
Should start reproducing the old fiat 500 and sell it. I’m sure there would be a lot of people interested.
@alphaomega6
"Retro" & "Nostalgia" are both powerful marketing motivators. Classic example being the BMC Austin Mini. An Icon still being produced by BMW.
Though niche market could turn out unprofitable and flop.
It shows how car manufacturers are rich. They leave behind equipment worth millions. And start new factories from scratch with new equipment.
@lenny108
In accountancy terms, Specialized Infrastructure is termed as being a "sunk cost".
It is costed out, apportioned, and recovered over the entirety of the product life cycle.
Awesome explore. Too bad the workers lost their jobs.
Such a shame and shows technology caught up with a facility that we consider to be very large but in the production of motor vehicles was considered too small. It costs millions to build a car plant with modern production facilities
Interesting video. I would have thought it was not wise to manufacture cars next to the sea.
Thanks!
My Family owns a Classic Fiat 500R from 1971, who knows, maybe it was also assembled in this factory.
That spiral ramp is so confusing both for foot traffic or cars as regardless of use, it really goes nowhere. All I can think of is that perhaps they drove the latest models they were making up to the edge of the roof for viewing like some car dealerships do? Love to get a definitive answer if anyone knows?
its so abandoned that you had to sneak in , and hide from who evers guarding it ,,,
And finally I found out one of the security guys was actually my good friend 😅
Sensational shootings. What is the music at the beginning of the video?
Thanks! It's from Epidemic Sounds - The Answer Lies - Christoffer Moe Ditlevsen
Geweldig Dat engels nederlands 😂 leuke video
We went on the butane cauliflower to.
Looks like a good site for Beach front condo's or hotels. Bought the land and site for pennies on the dollar most likely just to be rid of the factory. All necessary utilities already there. So much of the factory tooling and machining are still usable. Theres much that could be auctioned. The scrap metals alone would fetch a fair price.
There are many positives for the future. Rather than the current multi acre eye sore on the Sicilian ocean front.
@jonbutcher9805
Agreed.
Good analytical progressive thinking.
Sad😢
it is so sad, i love Italy, and Italians.
You sir have earned a subscriber.
Welcome Ahmed!
In 2011, the year of the factory's closure, I had the chance to visit a Mercedes Benz factory in Stuttgart. It was on a completely different level of technology. Add the remote location in a town, that other than that runs on fishery and tourism. This was a government project to bring wealth by planned economy, but in a competetive setting it was just not viable. Very sad to see it dormant, anyways...
very sad indeed...
What is amazing is the total lack of graffiti everywhere....
Spray paint is expensive for italian wallets
@@fabiog801 you’ve never been to Naples / Napoli
@@notmenotme614I’ve traveled all over Italy and sprayed graffiti is in every city to a greater or lesser amount; the only areas that seem to be spared are anything religious or ancient. So it is surprising not to see it here. Maybe Italian graffiti artists only care about doing it where more people will see it.
This is such a shame
Why ??!!!!
Why would they abandon the factory ?
I'll bet dollars to donuts that EV factories will look exactly like this within the next 10 years.
Yep, lots of "green" scams going on
In Europe and the US, most likely because the cheap Chinese EV cars will steamroll all the traditional car manufacturers because they’re all clinging to dinosaur engines like you apparently do.
@@marcd6897 I recently purchased a 2019 turbo diesel Ford Endura (Edge in America & Europe). The salesman tried to upsell me into a Chinese EV - I promptly informed him that the two things I refuse to have anything to do with are EV's & any vehicle made in China.
Sold to who and what will it be on the site when demolished 🤔