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Rīgas vagonbūves rūpnīca
Rolling stock manufacturer
Rolling stock manufacturer
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Rigas vagonbūves rūpnīca |
| logo | RVR logo.svg |
| type | Subsidiary |
| industry | Rail transport |
| fate | Defunct |
| predecessor | Ford-Vairogs |
| founded | 1895 |
| defunct | |
| location | Riga, Latvia |
| area_served | Former Soviet Union |
| products | Rail vehicles |

Rīgas vagonbūves rūpnīca (RVR) was a Latvian rail and tram vehicle manufacturer, most notable for its multiple unit trains and tram vehicles used throughout the Soviet Union and its successor states. It has been insolvent and non-operational since 2017.
History
The original works were founded in 1895 by the businessman Oscar Freywirth under the name Fēnikss. In 1936, Fenikss was reorganised into Joint Stock Company Vairogs, which later manufactured Ford-Vairogs automobiles under licence. Expropriated by the state following the takeover of Latvia by the Soviet Union and renamed RVR, it became for many years the largest producer of electric and diesel trains in the USSR and also produced tramcars. Its best known products are the ER1, ER2, ER7, ER9 and ER31 electric trains, DR1, DR1A and DR1P diesel trains, many of which are still in service today. Between 1973 and 1988 it built the high-speed ER200 train. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Comecon, the factory ceased operations in 1996 and was declared bankrupt in 1998. Privatized in two parts, one was bought by Severstal, a company controlled by Russian oligarch Alexey Mordashov. In 2001 the factory was bought by a holding company and new diesel units were built for Belarusian Railways from 2005 to 2008. Other orders were primarily for the refurbishment of the units it had previously manufactured. After its ownership structure changed several times it entered insolvency in 2017, following a dearth of orders for new vehicles for several years and several failed attempts at partnerships with other rail manufacturers.
Products
Trains
- AR-1 first produced 1969
- AR-2 first produced 1997
- DR-1 / DR-1P / DR-1A / DR-1B beginning in 1963
- ER-1 first produced 1957
- ER-2 / ER-2R / ER-2T beginning in 1962
- ER-3 produced 1963
- ER-6 prototype only in 1965
- ER-7 first produced 1957
- ER-9 / ER-9P / ER-9M / ER-9E / ER-9ET / ER-9T first produced 1962
- ER-10 first produced 1960
- ER-11 produced 1965
- ER-12 first produced 1976
- Er-200 first produced 1974
Trams
From 1923 to 1930 the factory produced some 40 tram cars for Riga. After World War II, in 1949 the factory started producing the MTV-82 tram. Between 1960 and 1989 more than 6000 RVR-6 tram cars were built.
Current operators
Many RVR trains built during the Soviet period are still in active service across the former USSR. Current operators are shown below. Very few, if any, RVR tramcars are still in operation, with most cities of the former USSR favouring tramcars built by ČKD Tatra.
| Company name | Country | Types in service (number) |
|---|---|---|
| Armenian Railways | Armenia Armenia | ER2 (66) |
| Azerbaijan State Railway | Azerbaijan Azerbaijan | ER2 (74) |
| Bulgarski Durzhavni Zheleznitsi | Bulgaria Bulgaria | Class 32 (79), Class 33 (6) |
| Belaruskaya Chyhunka | Belarus Belarus | ER9 (57), DR1 (~100), DR1A (~70) DR1B (15) DRB1 (12), DRB1m (7), DR1Pt (5) |
| Georgian Railway | Georgia Georgia | ER2 (~100) |
| Kazakhstan Temir Zholy | Kazakhstan Kazakhstan | ER9 (77), DR1 (14) DR1A (14) |
| Lietuvos Geležinkeliai | Lithuania Lithuania | ER9 (16), DR1 (12) |
| Pasažieru vilciens | Latvia Latvia | ER2 (108), ER2T (23), DR1A (46), DR1AM (9), DR1AC (5) |
| Željeznički prevoz Crne Gore | Montenegro Montenegro | Class 412 (5) |
| Makedonski Železnici | North Macedonia North Macedonia | Class 412 (4) |
| Rossiyskye Zheleznye Dorogi | Russia Russia | ER1 (260), ER2 (1106), ER22 (66), ER200 (2), ER9 (617) |
| Železnice Srbije | Serbia Serbia | Class 412 (38) |
| Ukrzaliznytsia | Ukraine Ukraine | ER1 (?), ER2 (?), ER9 (?), DR1A (57), DR1P (21) |
References
References
- (January 2018)
- "current operations". railfaneurope.
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