ICF: the great train factory
Luxury trains, Metro coaches and sleeper compartments are all made here
The Integral Coach Factory (ICF) in Perambur is a mini city that never sleeps.
Women
and men work through the day, and night, with clockwork precision,
under extreme conditions — hammering, welding and painting massive steel
plates until the end product comes out gleaming.
The
next time you travel in an overcrowded suburban train compartment or a
plush airconditioned coach on a long-distance express train anywhere in
India, remember there are 12,000 people behind its design and
fabrication.
ICF, where most coaches of the world’s largest rail network have been manufactured without a break, is truly Chennai’s pride.
At
the main assembly line, S. Mary Flower hammers a sheet of stainless
steel soon after it has been put together by her colleague, S. Padmini, a
welder. Mother of three, Ms. Flower secured the job after the death of
her husband, an ICF employee, who died in harness.
Far
away, in a corner of the furnishing unit, a group of young technicians
huddles together to piece electric cables within a shell (an unfinished
coach), in its final stages of completion.
In
between, there are hundreds of workers who do not rest even for a minute
as they race against time to meet deadlines of severalclients, from
various zones of Indian Railways to overseas government agencies too.
The
painting of the external frame of the coaches is fully automated and
the colour combination and pattern varies according to the type and
requirements of the client.
Once the coaches are
complete, with everything put in place, it is passed through a ‘shower
chamber’ as part of a leak test to ensure not a drop of water enters
inside.
Dedicated to the nation 59 years ago, ICF
recently rolled out its 50,000th shell. World leaders — Leonid I
Brezhnev, Queen Elizabeth and Zhou Enlai, to name a few — have visited
and recorded their impressions of ICF being a model factory, worthy of
being emulated.
“The work is challenging, yet so satisfying,” says Ms. Flower, echoing the mood of the rest of the 12,000-odd workforce.
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