Röchling Industrial Lützen has been producing precision-machined finished parts from thermoplastics and duroplastics since 1993. The company has thus been successfully active on the market for 30 years. The site celebrated the anniversary at the weekend with a small party for employees with their families and invited guests.
"We started here in Lützen in 1993 with four employees. I am pleased that today we can look back on 30 successful years," said Dirk Galler, Managing Director at the Lützen site during the celebration of the site's anniversary. "We have constantly developed - both in terms of our technologies and equipment and as a company in itself. Several times we have expanded our production and built new offices. But what pleases me most is that we have been able to recruit many dedicated colleagues during this time." Currently, more than 60 employees work at the site in Saxony-Anhalt.
In Lützen, finished parts made of plastics are produced according to individual customer requirements. This requires not only a broad knowledge of the materials and their processing, but also modern production facilities. "At the Lützen site, we have a modern machine and plant park," emphasises Dietmar Telgenkämper, Global Technical Director Machined Components. "With state-of-the-art CNC machining centres, we produce finished parts of the highest quality for our customers."
About 200 guests attended the celebration. In addition to employees and their families, a number of invited guests were also on hand. Among others, one of the first managing directors of the site, Klaus Trittmacher, showed the development of the site over the years in his speech. Representatives of the Freie Gesamtschule Lützen, which cooperates with the company in matters of vocational orientation, also took part in the event.
All in all, it was a colourful programme: from tours of the company to a children's programme and a fire show in the evening. "We are pleased that so many guests accepted our invitation and celebrated our 30th anniversary with us today," said Galler.