Villeroy & Boch

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Villeroy & Boch AG
Public (ISIN: DE0007657231)
Industry Ceramics
Founded Lorraine, Holy Roman Empire (1748 (1748))
Founder François Boch and Nicolas Villeroy
Headquarters Mettlach, Germany
Key people
Frank Göring, Jörg Wahlers, Nicolas Luc Villeroy, Andreas Pfeiffer, Manfred Finger, Volker Pruschke
Products Tableware, bathroom ceramics
Revenue €744 million (2012) €743 million (2011)
Number of employees
7400 (2013) 10200 (2008)
Divisions Tableware Bathroom and Wellness
Website www.villeroy-boch.com

Villeroy & Boch (French pronunciation: ​[vilʁwa.eˈbɔk], German: [ˌvɪlərɔɪ.ʔʊntˈbɔx]) is a large manufacturer of ceramics[1] with the company headquarters located in Mettlach, Germany.

Company history

The company began in the tiny Lorraine village of Audun le Tiche, where the iron master François Boch set up a pottery company with his three sons in 1748.[2] In 1766 Boch was licensed to build a ceramics kilnworks nearby at Septfontaines, Luxembourg, where it operated a porcelain factory. In 1785 Nicholas Villeroy became sole owner of the faience manufactory at Wallerfangen. In 1812 Jean-François Boch began construction of kilns at the nearby town of Mettlach, Saarland. In 1824 Boch commenced transfer printing on porcelain from engraved copper plates. On 14 April 1836, the Jean François Boch company merged with that of the competitor, Nicolas Villeroy, and became Villeroy & Boch, (V&B, also simply 'VB'). Since 1869, when Villeroy & Boch opened the first manufactory specializing in architectural tiles, the company has operated in three main areas, autonomous until 1982, tablewares, tiles for flooring and revetments, and fine plumbing fixtures.

Among its innovations in Mettlach at the end of the nineteenth century.was Phanolith, a kind of semi-transparent porcelain that combines the characteristics and benefits of jasperware and pate-sur-pate.[3] The creator of the Phanolith was the ceramics artist Jean-Baptiste Stahl, who headed the modelling section of Villeroy & Boch. Phanolith gained first wide public attention at the Paris Exposition Universelle (1900).

Villeroy & Boch has continued to base its broadest market in Germany.

Current situation

The company's Luxembourg factory was closed down in 2010. While the company is no longer run by a family member, under the present Group Chairman Frank Goering, there are various family members presently working in the company. Since 1990 the company has been listed on the German stock market, ticker symbol VIB3, but the voting capital is still in the hands of the family descendants. The majority of V&B shares is owned by Eczacibasi Holding.[4]

Footnotes

  1. Packagedfacts.com
  2. Timeline and brief history notes supplied by Villeroy & Boch AG to FundingUniverse.
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External links