Riga Autobus Factory


The Riga Autobus Factory was a factory in Jelgava, Latvia, making vans and minibuses under the brand name Latvija.

History

Origins, Riga period

During the Soviet period, RAF and UAZ were the only producers of vans and minibuses in the Soviet Union. RAF vans and minibuses were used only by state enterprises, most often as ambulances and for public transit. Private persons were not allowed to own them, the only exception being for families with at least five children.
In 1949, the factory began producing van bodies on the site of the Riga auto repair factory No.2. In 1955, it was renamed the Riga Experimental Bus Factory, and the products started to be abbreviated to RAF. It would become the main Soviet producer of minibuses.
RAF's first product was the RAF-251, a 22-seat local bus, based on the GAZ-51 chassis, with a wood and metal body. There was also a passenger- and freight version, the 251T, with a payload of 14 passengers and cargo.
From 1958, the factory started to produce RAF-977 minibuses, based on GAZ-21 Volga engine, transmission, axles, and steering. It was planned to produce passenger, freight, mail, and ambulance versions of the vehicle, to replace the modified estates then in use. Drawing inspiration from the VW Type 2, it had a front-mounted water-cooled engine, and seated ten. It debuted in 1957, and ten were built for display at that year's Moscow Youth Festival, leading to a proposed name Festival. The first batch was produced in 1959, under the new RAF 977 name. It got and could reach, the majority of those being hand-built.
In 1965, RAF proposed two prototypes, with the hope of persuading Minavtoprom to finance a new factory: a conventional version, comparable to the Ford Transit, or a forward control version, similar to the Renault Estafette. RAF management, in a rare move for a Soviet company, created two competing teams to individually design a new van. The conventional 962-I was selected, which seemed less likely to provide the money for an all-new facility. So RAF tried to persuade the selection committee to adopt the more radical 962-II, and did.
A one-tonne variant was based on a modernized 977D chassis. However, the factory size was not large enough to put this model into mass production, and therefore it was moved to ErAZ.

Move to Jelgava, decline and collapse

Construction of a new factory in Jelgava was begun on 25 July 1969, and finished in February 1976. It was designed to produce 17,000 vehicles per year. The factory produced several versions of the RAF-2203, which was widely sold in the Soviet Union and exported, mainly to Socialist bloc and aligned nations.
The massive factory created profound challenges for Soviet-occupied Latvia. During its planning, local economists warned that the project was unfeasible in the long term, but were ignored by the Soviet government. Due to a lack of local manpower, workers from all around the Soviet Union were brought to Jelgava, increasing the already high levels of immigration and putting strain on local infrastructure and the ethnic relations between Latvians and the mostly Russian-speaking newcomers. The proportion of Latvians living in Jelgava shrank from 80% to less than 50% during the Soviet times. An entirely new neighbourhood of Jelgava, bearing the RAF name, was built.
In addition, even with the imported workforce, the factory suffered from a lack of qualified manpower: engineers were made to work on the production line. Quality issues were rampant and well-known; on some days, all of the manufactured vehicles turned out to be defective. Even the large factory, in the end, turned out to be too small to install important machinery, slowing down production. A heavy blow for the factory came during Perestroika – around 1986, the factory was stripped of the State quality mark of the USSR. In 1987, the factory organized one of the first open management contests in the USSR, with Viktor Bossert from Omsk elected as director by the factory workers. Bossert tried to improve quality, even announcing a competition with Renault's Trafic van, but couldn't overcome the ineffective supply chain of the Soviet planned economy and the lack of incentive and competition due to guaranteed tenders from the Gossnab. He left the factory in 1990.
By the beginning of the 1990s, the RAF-2203 was completely outdated and the factory set about designing a new model. The original plan was to build a new RAF vehicle to be called the M1 "Roksana”, designed with help from the British consultancy International Automotive Developments. The model was successfully displayed at several auto salons, but never got further than a prototype. The same thing happened to the front-wheel drive 1994 RAF M2 'Stils' microbus.
After the collapse of the USSR, the new borders broke the supply chains and production fell drastically. An investment proposal came from the Russian GAZ company, but it was rejected by the Latvian government, which considered Russian capital a threat to Latvian independence. Although some Western and East Asian investors also showed their interest in RAF, all of them considered this investment too risky as the local economy was too small to support large production and the Russian market was virtually closed due to the volatile Russian economy and a complicated political relationship between Russia and Latvia. The large factory, largely dependent on parts and materials brought from outside Latvia, required a lot of resources for its maintenance and was described by some investors as the only valuable asset of the factory. Another blow was the popularity of the Russian GAZelle van, unveiled in 1994.
In 1997, the last batch of 13-seat RAF-22039s was released. The last automobile produced by the dying giant was the RAF-3311 — a hearse that could fit four bodies.
In 1998, RAF went bankrupt. The only part of the company that survived was RAF-Avia, a charter airline set up using the four airplanes owned by the plant. The manufacturing site, complete with machinery and land were purchased by SIA Baltiva, which was established in 2000, for 150 thousand lats. They considered selling it to a western automaker, but this proved unrealistic. As of 2002, the assembly shop was still in order and all the design documents existed, so production could be started again if there should be a need. ErAZ expressed interest, but probably only for the designs.
In 2005, SIA Baltiva was renamed SIA NP Jelgavas biznesa parks. Shortly after, the company's shares were transferred to Nordic Partners Properties Limited of the Nordic Partners Group, which was originally financed by the Icelandic businessman Gisli Reyninsson. On the estates purchased, NP Jelgavas biznesa parks developed an industrial park with a total area of 23 ha.

Legacy

Rumors came out in 2018 of RAF being revived, as SIA Rīgas Autobusu Fabrika, RAF was registered in the Latvian company database in August 2018, and was led by Ukrainian businessman Kyrylo Shumeiko. The company stated that they believed they would show off their first new model in 2019 and start production in 2020. It was also believed that the new RAF would focus on electric powered vehicles like vans and trolleybuses.
Shumeiko claimed that a prototype would be built in Vilnius, while the constructor work on the vehicles would take place at the Kharkiv National Automobile and Highway University (KhNADU). However, an investigation by the Russian-language news section of the Latvian channel LTV7 found out that none of the mentioned engineers at KhNADU had heard about the project. The author of sketches presented by Shumeiko was Svetlana Mirzoyan, who in the 1950s had designed the RAF-977; she responded that the sketches were made by her students, but that he was not authorised to use them. The new company had not informed Jelgava City Council or the business park at the former factory. Shumeiko later switched to consulting Ukrainian car importers on customs issues. The company was dissolved in July 2022.
Surviving prototypes of the plant are on display at the Riga Motor Museum, as well as production models in other institutions.

Models