Hainsberg paper

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Hainsberg paper

logo
legal form Company with limited liability
founding 1838
Seat Freital , Germany
management
  • Krystyna Saworska
  • Dietrich Arnhold
Number of employees approx. 120 (2013)
sales 27 million euros (2006)
Branch Papermaking
Website www.hainsberg-papier.de

The Hainberg Papier GmbH (colloquially paper Hainsberg ) is in the paper manufacturing business headquartered in Freitaler district Hainberg . It specializes in paper production from waste paper . Hainsberg Papier produces printing, office, packaging and envelope papers as well as colored papers. With the “Lettura” brand family, Hainsberg Papier produces natural recycling paper entirely from waste paper. The Hainsberger paper is also available as a roll and in large formats from 50 to 110 g / m². In 2013, about 120 people worked in the factory. In the 2006 financial year, sales were around EUR 27 million. Around 45,000 tons of recycled paper are produced every year (as of 2009).

history

Participation certificate from Thode'schen Papierfabrik AG from November 19, 1923
Factory view 1994
Factory view winter 2012

The company was founded on February 6, 1838 by the Dresden businessman Gerhardt Friedrich Thode and the Chemnitz pharmacist Wilhelm Eduard Michael as Thode & Michael paper factory . The production of paper began in 1842 with a paper machine that produced 77,000 kilograms of paper. The company had 80 employees. Only two years later, Thode passed the company management on to his two sons Friedrich Edmund and Robert Wilhelm, who were able to put a second paper machine into operation in 1851. In 1856 the company was sold to Allgemeine Deutsche Creditanstalt Leipzig , which converted the company, now known as Thode'sche Papierfabrik zu Hainsberg , into a stock corporation .

In 1858 there were about 550 workers in the paper mill. Two new paper machines were set up in 1859 and 1863. The Rabenauer Mühle wood grinding shop was incorporated into the company in 1868 and the paper mill thus had its own raw material production facility. In 1869, Emil Nacke, as a student on leave from the Dresden Polytechnic, built a plant for processing raw material. The straw was broken down with sodium bicarbonate in rotating spherical boilers into which steam was introduced. After a fifth paper machine went into operation in 1874, one of the older machines was replaced in 1890 by a new line for rotary printing paper . However, this was shut down again in 1901 together with the straw material factory.

At the beginning of the 20th century, extensions and technical improvements followed in the paper mill. In the 1930s, the Köttewitz paper and cardboard factory (1936) and the Gröba paper factory (1937) were attached to the Hainsberg paper factory. After the Second World War , the factory initially stopped production, but resumed production on May 15, 1945. On June 9, the company came under the Soviet military administration , but initially remained as a stock corporation. Its dissolution finally took place on June 30, 1952. The paper mill was taken over on October 1, 1952 by Zentrag (central printing, purchasing and auditing company).

From around 1960, investments were made again in the Hainsberg paper mill, so a new power plant was built by 1964. In 1973, waste paper was first used as a raw material for paper production. In 1974 the paper mill was affiliated to the Combine Pulp and Paper from Heidenau. Two years later, the Technitz and Nossen paper mills merge with the Hainsberg company. Paper machines 1 and 3 were replaced by a new one in 1985.

After the turnaround and reunification , Dresden Papier AG was founded on July 1, 1990 , to which the new Hainsberg GmbH paper mill was affiliated. From 1991 the company specialized in the production of graphic recycled papers, as part of this reorientation, a waste paper processing plant was completed on the company premises in 1994. In 2000, Dresden Papier AG sold the plant to Golzern Holding GmbH. In 2001 it invested around 7 million euros in modernizing and expanding the factory. The flood of the century in 2002 led to the discontinuation of production at the company premises located directly on the Weißeritz . It was partially put back into operation on October 9, 2002. Hoya Papier GmbH took over the Hainsberger paper factory in 2010.

Web links

Commons : Papierfabrik Hainsberg  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. production
  2. Domokos Szabó: The Hainsberg paper mill is building a new power plant next year . In: Sächsische Zeitung , August 11, 2009.
  3. ^ Domokos Szabó: Rebirth in six hours . In: Sächsische Zeitung, August 11, 2007
  4. ^ Domokos Szabó: Hainsberg paper mill is getting even cleaner . In: Sächsische Zeitung, October 16, 2009
  5. ^ Frieder Schmidt: "Nacke Emil" in Neue Deutsche Bibliographie 18 (1997) p. 686 f.