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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

Lansing Delta Township Assembly

Lansing Delta Township Assembly (LDT) is a General Motors automobile assembly factory in Delta Township, Michigan, on land that is shared by the township and the nearby city of Lansing. It manufactures GM's full-size crossover SUVs.

Completed in 2006, the factory measures 3,400,000 square feet (320,000 m) in size, and employed 3,634 hourly workers and 262 salaried workers as of 2010. The adjacent Lansing Regional Stamping employed 243 hourly workers, and 17 salary workers for a total of 4,156 workers in the factory complex. Its workers are represented by UAW 602 and 652, respectively, and assumed operations of the former Lansing Metal Center and the Lansing Craft Centre when they closed.

"Green" factory

Lansing Delta Township Assembly is a LEED gold-certified automobile plant.

Environmental features of the factory include:

  • a 45% reduction in non-manufacturing water use, saving over 4,000,000 US gallons (15,000 m) of water a year;
  • a roof drain system which catches rain water and diverts to cisterns stored above the factory's restrooms, which is then used to flush toilets;
  • having 25% of the plant's construction materials composed of recycled materials;
  • leaving 50% of the site undeveloped;
  • a 20% reduction in energy used for lighting the plant by lowering overall lighting in areas such as aisles; and
  • the elimination of ozone-depleting substances used in any of the building’s heating and cooling, refrigeration, and fire suppression systems.

The factory grounds also contain a 75-acre (30 ha) wildlife area managed by the factory's Wildlife Habitat Team, who also hosts wildlife educational events for local community groups and schools.

Vehicles produced

Current

As of September 2022:

Past

References

  1. ^ Lansing Delta on GM.com
  2. ^ General Motors Media, website accessed 22 October 2010
  3. ^ GM Opens First-Ever LEED-Gold Certified Automobile Manufacturing Facility Archived 2006-09-05 at the Wayback Machine, GM Press Release – August 3, 2006, accessed July 15, 2007

42°41′29″N 84°40′44″W / 42.6913°N 84.6789°W / 42.6913; -84.6789