Building Your Ride New Mexico

It sits there, gleaming in the sun, paint clean and chrome shining.

Local Companies

Chrysler-Plymouth Authorized Sales & Service
(505) 863-6823
1030 Highway 491
Gallup, NM
Mills Cooper Motors
(505) 538-5385
Highway 180 At Rosed
Silver City, NM
Bulldog Dodge Chrysler Jeep
(505) 748-1317
919 S 1st St
Artesia, NM
J & S Auto Sales
(505) 396-3168
1211 S Main Ave
Lovington, NM
Ford Authorized Sales & Services
(505) 546-2765
1512 E Pine St
Deming, NM
Elite Auto Sales
(505) 232-2750
6108 Lomas Blvd NE
Albuquerque, NM
Jack Key
(505) 524-7741
1840 N Main St
Las Cruces, NM
Interstate Auto Sales Inc
(505) 647-9465
1412 Portland Dr
Las Cruces, NM
Roswell Ford Lincoln Mercury
(505) 623-3673
821 N Main St
Roswell, NM
Estrada Auto Sales
(505) 873-2622
6800 Huseman Pl SW
Albuquerque, NM

provided by:
2007 Saturn OUTLOOK
(Continue to more photos from MyRide.com)

 

Introduction

It sits there, gleaming in the sun, paint clean and chrome shining. It's a car, a new car, and it sure looks enticing. Go ahead: get behind the wheel and take her for a test drive. But before you do, there's a few things you might want to know about how that car came to be. In fact, there are volumes of important information about how a car goes from idea...to wheels on the ground. It's a long (though getting shorter) and expensive process that starts with that one idea that gets executives thinking about headlines, sales or survival. Indeed, the process of actually building a car has become an immense game of connecting dots and modules from around the world. As we dive more deeply into how cars are built, we'll focus on three core areas: the Idea, Building Your Ride and Buying Your Ride. For now, we'll start with the basics of each, but stay tuned for an expanded series of articles about how cars are built, and why.

Delta Township Assembly

We toured the new assembly plant that builds the Buick Enclave, GMC Acadia and Saturn Outlook crossovers for General Motors and came away impressed. According to GM, they plan to save more than $1 million in energy and water costs for the plant every year.  Steps taken include a white polymer roof that keeps the plant cooler and reduced and strategic lighting throughout the facility. Other highlights include a 75-acre wildlife habitat and recycling initiatives such as using rain water for toilets. All told, 25 percent of the construction materials used to build the plant were composed of recycled content.  In a way, the Delta Township plant replaces Lansing's old Car Assembly plant, which opened for business in 1902 and closed its doors in 2004. The old plant was home to many cars in the GM lineup, including Oldsmobile and Pontiac.

 

Continue to Building Your Ride Review from MyRide.com

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