Tata Motors-owned Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) has announced a major investment boost of £1.5 billion to introduce a technologically advanced aluminium vehicle architecture in a new range of models.
The company will create as many as 1,700 new jobs at its advanced manufacturing facility in Solihull in the West Midlands region of England to meet the requirements of the enhanced product portfolio.
The latest additions will bring the total number of UK manufacturing jobs announced by Jaguar Land Rover over the last three years to almost 11,000.
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"Jaguar Land Rover is a business driven by design, technology and innovation and this investment and level of job creation is yet further evidence of our commitment to advancing the capability of the UK automotive sector and its supply chain," Jaguar Land Rover Chief Executive Officer Ralf Speth said at the Frankfurt Motor Show on Monday.
As part of a series of announcements at the automotive show in Germany, Speth revealed that the first new model to utilise the innovative new architecture will be a mid-sized sports sedan from Jaguar.
The new model, to be launched in 2015, is being billed as one of the most efficient, advanced and refined premium sports sedans in the segment.
It will also feature the first engine to be built at the iconic luxury car brands' new £500-million engine manufacturing centre near Wolverhampton.
Jaguar also revealed its first-ever sports crossover concept vehicle - the C-X17 - which was created as a design study to introduce the aluminium monocoque architecture.
According to Jaguar Land Rover, the inherent flexibility of the latest technology will enable the Jaguar Land Rover business to not only enter but aggressively compete in exciting new segments and form the basis on which an exciting range of future Jaguars will be built.
"Jaguar Land Rover has been experiencing great success over the last couple of years but this ground-breaking project takes Jaguar onto the next level.
This all aluminium architecture project typifies the type of innovative and high value R&D that the UK excels in, and the government is supporting