Renault renames Le Mans site after former CEO Louis Schweitzer
Renault Group renamed its Le Mans facility 'Louis Schweitzer Manufacture' to honor the late CEO who led the company's privatization, the Nissan Alliance, and the Dacia acquisition.
83
1996
What Happened
Louis Schweitzer served as Renault's Chairman and CEO from 1992 to 2005. He oversaw the company's privatization in 1996, formed the Renault-Nissan Alliance in 1999, and acquired Dacia. Under his leadership, iconic models like the Twingo and Mégane Scénic were launched. He also consolidated chassis expertise at the Le Mans site, creating Auto Chassis International.
Becomes Chairman and CEO of Renault
Privatization of Renault
Creation of Renault-Nissan Alliance and acquisition of Dacia
End of term as CEO
Passes away at age 83
“He is the one who brought Renault into the 21st century.”
Why this matters
Louis Schweitzer transformed Renault from a state-owned enterprise into a global player; the renaming ensures his contributions are permanently recognized at a site he helped make a chassis engineering hub.
Terms in This Story
- Alliance
- A strategic partnership between automakers, involving cross-shareholding and collaboration.
- ENA
- École Nationale d'Administration, a prestigious French graduate school for public administration.
- HALDE
- Haute Autorité de Lutte contre les Discriminations et pour l'Égalité, a French government agency combating discrimination.
Summarised from the linked release; details can be imperfect — always verify against the original source.