Premises Description

General Motors Corporation (founded 1908, headquartered Detroit Michigan; today General Motors Company after 2009 reorganization) was through the 20th century the largest U.S. automobile manufacturer and operated an extensive network of U.S. assembly plants, foundries, engine plants, transmission plants, stamping plants, and downstream component operations. Major GM asbestos-era U.S. operations included:

  • Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly (Detroit MI) — flagship Cadillac/Buick plant
  • Flint Assembly Complex (Flint MI) — historic Chevrolet/Buick plants and the Buick City complex
  • Lansing Car Assembly (Lansing MI) — Oldsmobile plants
  • Lordstown Assembly (Lordstown OH) — Vega and later Chevrolet plants
  • Wentzville Assembly (Wentzville MO) — GM’s St. Louis-area complex
  • Janesville Assembly (Janesville WI) — closed 2008
  • Arlington Assembly (Arlington TX)
  • Fairfax Assembly (Kansas City KS)
  • Spring Hill Assembly (Spring Hill TN) — Saturn complex
  • Defiance Foundry (Defiance OH) — engine block castings
  • Saginaw Steering Gear / Delphi (Saginaw MI) — components
  • AC Delco / Delco-Moraine Brake (Dayton OH and elsewhere) — friction products
  • Stamping plants at Mansfield OH, Marion IN, Pittsburgh PA, and Parma OH
  • Truck plants at Flint MI, Pontiac MI, Janesville WI, and Pontiac MI

GM foundries (Defiance, Saginaw, Tonawanda NY, Massena NY) were particularly asbestos-intensive — operating cupola furnaces, electric arc furnaces, and high-temperature mold operations through the asbestos era.

Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that General Motors — as premises owner — exposed its UAW workforce, contractor pipefitters, insulators, boilermakers, and trade workers to extensive asbestos.

General Motors has been named as a Premises Defendant in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation.

Workers Exposed

  • UAW Local members across GM’s U.S. assembly, foundry, engine, transmission, and stamping plants
  • Refinery pipefitters and millwrights working GM capital projects
  • Insulators (HFIAW Local members) on GM construction and turnaround crews
  • Boilermakers (IBB Local members) building GM foundry and plant equipment
  • Brake mechanics and GM service technicians working AC Delco, Delco-Moraine, and Delphi friction products
  • Construction-trade workforces on GM EPC projects

If You Worked at a GM Plant

If you worked at a General Motors assembly plant, foundry, engine plant, transmission plant, or stamping plant during the asbestos era — as a GM employee or as a dispatched contractor trade worker — and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or another asbestos-related illness, you may have legal rights.

Free, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O’Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956