Schaeffler opens new development center in Kysuce, Slovakia
Photo courtesy of Schaeffler

Schaeffler opens new development center in Kysuce, Slovakia

Schaeffler, a leading global supplier to the automotive and industrial sectors based in Herzogenaurach, Germany, has opened a new state-of-the-art development center at its location in Kysuce, Slovakia, to expand its global development activities for advanced mobility solutions. 

The center develops products and components for electromobility as well as chassis systems for applications such as automated driving. The global automotive and industrial supplier is also expanding its existing testing facility in Kysuce by adding new laboratory and testing equipment and test stations. The new development center and the testing facility upgrade together represent an investment of about EUR20 million (USD22 million).

“The ability to innovate has never been more critical to our company’s success,” said Matthias Zink, CEO, Automotive Technologies, Schaeffler AG. “As a future-oriented technology company, Schaeffler is therefore investing heavily in research and development – in Kysuce and worldwide.”

Schaeffler’s Kysuce location has a workforce of about 4,300 people from 20 countries. The company aims to have as many as 500 developers working there on future mobility by 2025. To achieve this, Schaeffler is creating a range of new positions at the location, focusing in particular on partially and fully electrified drive technologies such as hybrid modules and electric axles.

“The Kysuce region is ideal for Schaeffler. It means we benefit from world-class universities and research institutions with relevant technological expertise and have access to Slovakia’s best and brightest development specialists,” said Milan Jurky, the managing director in charge of Schaeffler’s campus in Kysuce.

Innovating for tomorrow’s mobility 

The newly built facilities comprise a floor area of around 8,000 square meters: 4,000 in the four-level development center plus another 4,000 for testing stations and equipment. Construction work on the new development center building began at the end of 2021, and now, one and a half years later, the first employees are moving in. The entire building’s design and fitout are geared towards New Work, with ultra-modern office equipment, dedicated communication, and collaboration zones, and “gravity points,” where employees can network and share ideas. 

“We are responding to today’s increased need for flexible and digital collaboration,” said Jurky. “We’re giving our people workspaces that are fit for the future.”

The new center caters for a wide range of development activities for new products and customer-specific solutions. These activities include system and software development, simulation and testing, hardware design, and mechanical product design. The development center’s specialists also undertake a comprehensive range of project management activities for international customers from the automotive industry. 

In the adjoining factory halls, Schaeffler assembles motor and transmission systems, an extensive array of bearings, actuator systems, components for electric axles and hybrid drives, and chassis actuators such as electromechanical active roll control systems. In all of this, the company is benefitting from tight integration of its development and manufacturing activities at one location.

The new development center in Kysuce is part of a global network comprising around 8,000 employees at 20 research and development locations worldwide. 

“At more than half of our development locations, we are working on future-ready electrified powertrain and mobility solutions and innovative chassis solutions for our customers worldwide,” said Dr. Jochen Schröder, Schaeffler’s head of E-Mobility. The development centers for modern powertrain and mobility solutions include Wooster and Troy (U.S.A.), Puebla (Mexico), Bühl and Herzogenaurach (Germany), Szombathely (Hungary), Svitavy (Czech Republic), Pune (India), Seoul (South Korea), Yokohama (Japan), as well as Taicang and Changsha (China). 

“Our strategy revolves around having a global development network with distinct local specialties and responsibilities. This global structure also means that we are always close to our customers and can respond swiftly to local needs and requirements,” Schröder said.