Think tank for the mobility of today and tomorrow

The Porsche think tank is celebrating its anniversary: ​​50 years ago, the Weissach Development Centre went into operation. The Development Centre’s success story began on 1 October, 1971 with the relocation of the development and design departments from Zuffenhausen to Weissach, 25 kilometres away from Stuttgart. Since then, the Development Centre has been a hub for innovative vehicles and intelligent development projects.

The Development Centre currently covers an area of around 100 hectares and 6,700 people are employed at the site. Such figures were not yet imaginable when Porsche began the search for its own test track in the 1950s. Back then, motorsport and road driving still served as the major test fields for new developments such as the Porsche 356. Finding the right site was initially a little difficult, also because Ferry Porsche attached great importance to environmental protection and, for example, did not want to sacrifice fertile fields to the test track. Herbert Linge, a former racing driver, then gave him the decisive tip: “I was able to convince Ferry Porsche of Weissach, my hometown, at the end of the 1950s. It is logistically and conveniently close to Zuffenhausen and is far enough in the country to attract little attention. And of course, there was more space here to build a test track than in the city."

Herbert Linge gave the decisive tip

On 29 January, 1960, the then test engineer Helmuth Bott recorded the Weissach Project for the first time in a memo with sketches. On 16 October, 1961, Ferry Porsche broke ground for the first phase of construction at the new test site in the Weissach and Flacht districts, 25 kilometres west of Stuttgart. A circuit - called a skid pad - and other test tracks were created, on which prototypes could be tested up to their load limits. For example, the Porsche 901 was brought to market maturity here.

Michael Steiner, Head of Research and Development at Porsche AG, Herbert Linge, Porsche legend and born in Weissach, on the Skid Pad, Weissach, 2021, Porsche AG
Herbert Linge, Porsche legend and born in Weissach, and Michael Steiner, Head of Research and Development at Porsche AG, on the Skid Pad in May 2021.
Weissach Development Centre,  2021, Porsche AG
The skid pad and the test track are still an elementary part of the development center today: all prototypes always drive here first.
Ferry Porsche (center) with Helmuth Bott, Ghislaine Kaes and Hans Tomala (from left), Weissach/Flacht, Porsche AG
Ferry Porsche (center) with Helmuth Bott, Ghislaine Kaes and Hans Tomala (from left) on a visit of inspection to the Weissach/Flacht.
Groundbreaking of the skid pad in Flacht/Weissach, 1961, Porsche AG
Groundbreaking of the skid pad in Flacht / Weissach with Ferry Porsche on October 16, 1961.
Porsche 356 B Coupés, inauguration and first use of the test field in Weissach, 1962, Porsche AG
Inauguration and first use of the test field in Weissach on October 15, 1962 with Porsche 356 B Coupés.
Weissach Development Centre,  around 1975, Porsche AG
Aerial view of the development center in Weissach around 1975.
911 Carrera (964), wind tunnel in Weissach,  around 1987, Porsche AG
In May 1986, Porsche opened the most modern wind tunnel in the world at the time. The photo shows a 911 Carrera (964) in the wind tunnel in Weissach, around 1987.

With the increasing use of the new test facilities in the 1960s, the plans for the construction of an integrated research and development centre in Weissach became more concrete. The expertise of the departments and professions spread across the Zuffenhausen and Weissach locations were to be bundled. In 1969, construction began for the Weissach Development Centre. On 1 October, 1971, the Porsche development department, including the company's own motorsport division, moved to Weissach and the Porsche Weissach Development Centre was officially put into operation with 500 employees.

The Porsche Style department followed in 1972. By 1974, a building, which is still iconic today, was built in the shape of a standard hexagon, with the intention of creating the ideal working conditions and opportunities for collaboration. The Development Centre was designed as a composition of several small think tanks, with the central “brain” being assured high response and development speeds thanks to the short “neural pathways”. In total, the core hexagon with its two extensions built in 1984 and 1992 as well as the Porsche Style office formed around 7,000 m² of office and studio space. At the same time, Porsche was continuing to expand its testing capacities. By the mid-1980s, a measuring centre for environmental technology and a test building for engines and power units were built, among other new facilities. In May 1986, Porsche opened what was then the most modern wind tunnel in the world.

Due to the advancing development of vehicle technology, the requirements for the infrastructure of the Weissach Development Centre also changed. “Since 2010 we have invested hundreds of millions in the construction of new buildings and systems. A sum in the hundred-million range is also available for current projects,” explains Michael Steiner, Board Member for Research and Development at Porsche AG. A second access road, a complete vehicle test building, a centre for safety tests and a climatic wind tunnel are currently being built in the southern area of the development access road. The site will be expanded by twelve hectares by 2025.

Weissach Development Centre,  2021, Porsche AG
The Porsche Development Center in Weissach currently covers 900,000 square meters. The sites premises will be expanded by 12 hectares by 2025.

From the first drawing to the finished prototype, vehicles are developed, tested and prepared for series production in Weissach. The spectrum ranges from design and conception, model building and first prototypes, testing of aerodynamics, acoustics and electronics, the development of drive systems, steering and chassis, to safety tests,  trials and Porsche’s own test track and motorsport department. “With the Development Centre, we are setting the global benchmark in automotive development. Here we are shaping the mobility of today and tomorrow, with even more efficient and cleaner drive systems, new driving functions and innovative connectivity solutions that increase safety, environmental sustainability and driving fun and continue to make driving a Porsche an exciting, dynamic experience,” says Michael Steiner.

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Jürgen Kern enjoyed a decades-long career at Porsche as a development engineer. His son, Lars, followed in his footsteps and when he isn't driving in endurance races or breaking records on the Nordschleife he too is based at the Weissach Development Centre. The Newsroom caught up with the pair there.