Initial Location
Kharkiv
Kharkiv
Nizhny Tagil
St Petersburg(Leningrad)
St Petersburg(Leningrad)
St Petersburg(Leningrad)
Chelyabinsk
Volgograd(Stalingrad)
Nizhny Novgorod(Gorky)
Yekaterinburg(Sverdlovsk)
Pre-Soviet name
Kharkiv Locomotive Factory(KhPZ), 1895
Treasury iron foundry, 1801
Putilov Factory, 1868
Nizhny Novgorod Machine Factory, 1849
Early Soviet name
Kharkiv Diesel Factory
Kharkiv Komintern Locomotive Factory, 1928
Dzerzhinsky Ural Railroad Car Factory,
Uralvagonzavod, (UVZ or
Vagonka), 1936
Factory No. 185 (S.M. Kirov), 1935; originally a part of
Bolshevik Factory No. 232
Red Putilovite Plant, 1922
renamed
Kirov Plant, 1934
K.E. Voroshilov (
Russian), 1932; originally a part of
Bolshevik Factory No. 232
Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant(ChTZ), 1933
Dzerzhinsky Stalingrad Tractor Factory(STZ), 1930
Krasnoye Sormovo(Andrei Zhdanov), 1920
Ordzhonikidze Ural Heavy Machine Building Plant (UZTM), 1933
Factory Number
Factory No. 75
Factory No. 183, 1936
Factory No. 185
Factory No. 100 until 1941
Factory No. 174
Factory No. 100, 1941
Factory No. 112
World War II
Moved to Tankograd in Chelyabinsk, 1941
KhPZ merged with
Uralvagonzavodin Nizhny Tagil to form Ural Tank Factory No. 183 (I.V. Stalin), 1941;
Became the world's largest tank factory.
Partially moved to Tankograd in Chelyabinsk, 1941
Partially
[2]moved to Tankograd in Chelyabinsk, 1941
Moved to
Chkalov, 1941;
Moved again to Omsk, as Omsk Lenin Factory No. 174,1942
Chelyabinsk Kirov Factory, unofficially known as
Tankograd
Overran in the Battle of Stalingrad, 1942