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Kone ja Silta

Kone- ja Siltarakennus Oy
Maskin- och Brobyggnads Ab
Finnish: Kone ja Silta
Swedish: Maskin o. Bro
osakeyhtiö
Industry Engineering
Fate acquired by Wärtsilä
Predecessor
  • Osbergs Mekaniska Verkstad
  • Brobyggnads Ab
Successors Valmet; Metso; ASSA Abloy
Founded 18 March 1892 (1892-03-18) in Helsinki, Finland
Defunct 18 July 1938 (1938-07-18)
Headquarters Sörnäinen, Helsinki, Finland
Brands Separators: Milka; Lacta
Locks: Abloy
Owners Robert Mattson (50.4%, 1935)
Parent Wärtsilä (1935 →)
Divisions General division
Separator division
Subsidiaries

Kone- ja Siltarakennus Oy ("Kone ja Silta"; Swedish: Maskin- och Brobyggnads Ab; "Maskin o. Bro") is a Finnish former engineering company based in Sörnäinen, Helsinki.

The 1892 founded company grew heavily in the 1920s and 1930s by acquiring Finnish engineering companies; the products were ships, steel bridges, weighing scales, separators and other machinery. The company's separators were produced under brands Lacta and Milka and they were also produced in Sweden, Denmark and France. By the early 1930s Kone ja Silta held virtually the whole Finnish shipbuilding industry.

Majority of the company ownership was acquired by Wärtsilä iron works in 1935 and Kone- ja Siltarakennus was incorporated into Wärtsilä Group in 1938. The acquisition was prominent due to the significant size difference of the companies, and a major step in Wärtsilä's development as one of the leading engineering companies of Finland.

Production was transferred from Sörnäinen to Joensuu and Järvenpää in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The old factory area is nowadays part of Merihaka.

The company name was originally written officially in Swedish Maskin- och Brobyggnads Aktiebolaget, "Machine and Bridge Construction Limited" and widely shortened Maskin o. Bro, "Machine and Bridge". The Finnish name Kone- ja Siltarakennus, shortened Kone ja Silta respectively, was used in Finnish speaking context. The company name was changed officially into Finnish in 1935, but the Swedish speaking name was used in parallel after that.


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