Buchansky glassware factory is an industrial enterprise in the city of Bucha, Kiev-Svyatoshinsky district of the Kiev region of Ukraine .
| Buchansky glass container factory | |
|---|---|
| Type of | Open Joint Stock Company |
| Year of foundation | 1946 |
| Location | |
| Industry | glass industry |
| Products | glassware |
History
A glass factory [1] in the urban type of Bucha was built in accordance with the fourth five-year plan for the restoration and development of the national economy of the USSR on the site of a brick factory that was destroyed during the Great Patriotic War and put into operation in 1946. Initially, the factory produced tiles and glass insulators for overhead communication lines , then mastered the production of window glass and work with silicate clay.
Since 1954, the main products of the plant became glass containers [2] (mainly glass jars with a volume of 0.3 liters).
In 1965, the plant mastered the production of technical glass pipes with a diameter of 40 - 150 mm, and from 1975 to 1995 - produced thermoses and glass thermos flasks .
As of the beginning of 1984, the plant was one of the largest enterprises of the glass industry on the territory of the Ukrainian SSR [3] .
In general, in Soviet times, the plant was one of the leading enterprises in the village [1] [2] [4] [5] .
After the independence of Ukraine , on December 1, 1993, the state-owned enterprise was transformed into an open joint-stock company , later it was transferred to the jurisdiction of the state corporation Ukrbudmateriali [6] .
In May 1995, the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine approved a decision on the privatization of the plant [6] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Butch // Great Soviet Encyclopedia. / redkoll., ch. ed. S. I. Vavilov. 2nd ed. volume 6. M., State Scientific Publishing House "Great Soviet Encyclopedia", 1951. p. 413
- ↑ 1 2 Bucha, Kyiv Oblast // Istoriya Mist and Strelka Ukrainian RSR. Kiev region. - Kyiv, Head editors of the URE AN URSR, 1971.
- ↑ Glass industry // Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia. volume 10. Kiev, “Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia”, 1984. p.451
- ↑ Bucha // Big Soviet Encyclopedia. / ed. A.M. Prokhorova. 3rd ed. volume 4. M., "Soviet Encyclopedia", 1971.
- ↑ Bucha // Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia. volume 2. Kiev, "Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia", 1979.
- ↑ 1 2 Postanova of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine No. 343a vid 15 grass 1995 p. “Change of ownership, which is necessary to privatize privatization in 1995”