Changes in Dornier’s Senior Management
After 35 years in the company, including 25 years as Managing Director, Peter D. Dornier will hand over the operational management of Lindauer Dornier GmbH on 1 July 2024 to join the Supervisory Board of the family-owned company. His successor as Chairman of the Board of Management will be Andreas Kueckelmann, previously Technical Managing Director at Dornier.
Franz-Peter Matheis, Commercial Managing Director, will support Kueckelmann.
The planned change at the top is part of a rejuvenation of the operational level aiming to make the traditional family business fit for the future. “By handing over the operational management and making the planned move to the Supervisory Board, I am following Dornier’s tradition of interweaving the established with the new,” says Peter D. Dornier.” As a member of the Supervisory Board, I will do everything in my power to ensure that Lindauer Dornier remains an independent, internationally active family business and continues to operate successfully.”
Clear commitment to production in Germany
In 1989, after studying mechanical engineering in Esslingen and completing his diploma thesis in gas turbine design at mtu in Munich, Peter D. Dornier joined the family business, which his father Peter Dornier had founded in Lindau-Rickenbach in the summer of 1949 with engineers from Dornier’s former aircraft building division. Taking over as speaker of the board of management in 1999 and later on promoted to CEO, he continues to drive forward the technological development of Dornier, already an internationally renowned mechanical and plant engineering company at the time.
Today, around 1,000 “Dornianers” work at the company, 63 of whom are trainees. Peter D. Dornier also remains true to the company’s clear commitment to producing all of its machines and systems exclusively in Germany. Basis for this are the “Seven Commandments”, principles of Lindauer Dornier GmbH, which he developed with a group of leading employees after joining the company in the early 1990s and which still guide the company today.
Dornier is currently realising the largest investments in its recent company history in order to make the Lindau and Esseratsweiler sites fit for the future. In addition to modernising the machinery, this also includes new photovoltaic systems on the roofs of the production halls. In the long term, Dornier aims to cover most of its electricity requirements from renewable sources. The investments in the new training centre at the headquarters in Lindau also show that the family business is serious about rejuvenation. From 2024, up to 75 young people will be trained here on 1,000 m2 as mechatronics engineers, industrial mechanics, machine and plant operators as well as commercial employees and dual university students.
Strategic focus on flexibility and quality
During Peter D. Dornier’s tenure as CEO, the weaving machine division has been characterised by the increasing demand for technical textiles. While the manufacture of clothing and home textiles, which are also produced on Dornier weaving machines, is mainly about mass, the focus for technical textiles for the chemical, automotive and aerospace industries is on precision, quality and maximum production reliability. Manufacturers also appreciate the durability and flexibility of Dornier weaving machines, which achieve running times of over 40 years. To enable fabric manufacturers to convert Dornier air-jet and rapier weaving machines more quickly, Peter D. Dornier is driving forward the platform concept. A milestone in this strategy was the market launch of the P2 rapier weaving machine in 2019. Thanks to its modular design, fabric manufacturers can easily adapt it and thus react quickly and flexibly to market fluctuations.
Part of fast-growing future fields
When Peter D. Dornier took over the business of Lindauer Dornier in 1999, smartphones, photovoltaic systems and electric cars in large quantities were still visions of the future. Today, Dornier’s Special Machines division designs, develops and builds plants on which the company’s customers produce e.g. special films for smartphones, PV systems and lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles.
Fibre composite components in series production
Peter D. Dornier demonstrated his pioneering spirit by founding the Composite Systems (CS) division in 2014, in which Dornier bundles its decades of experience in the construction of weaving machines and film stretching systems. Here, the company develops state-of-the-art systems for the scalable series production of high-quality yet cost-effective composite semi-finished products made of carbon, glass and aramid for the growing fibre composite industry – an industry that is also on the rise due to increasing sustainability requirements and the associated demand for weight and CO2 savings. Highly specialised suppliers use CS systems to produce lightweight components for sports equipment, high-performance vehicles and aircraft. In a way, Claude Dornier’s grandson is taking the company back to its roots: while the knowledge of the former aircraft engineers around founder Peter Dornier was used in the construction of weaving machines when Lindauer Dornier was founded, the expertise of Dornier engineers now flows into the production of components for the latest aircraft.