
BMW is headquartered in Munich, Bavaria, Germany. It also owns and produces Mini cars, and is the parent company of Rolls-Royce Motor Cars. BMW produces motorcycles under BMW Motorrad. In
2012, the BMW Group produced 1,845,186 automobiles and 117,109 motorcycles across all
of its brands. BMW is part of the "German Big 3" luxury automakers,
along with Audi and Mercedes-Benz, which
are the three best-selling luxury automakers in the world.
BMW was established as a
business entity following a restructuring of the Rapp Motorenwerke aircraft manufacturing firm in
1917. After the end of World War I in 1918, BMW was forced
to cease aircraft-engine production by the terms of the Versailles Armistice Treaty.[5]The
company consequently shifted to motorcycle production in 1923, once the
restrictions of the treaty started to be lifted,[6] followed by automobiles in 1928–29.[7][8][9]
The first car which BMW
successfully produced and the car which launched BMW on the road to automobile
production was the Dixi, it was based on the Austin 7 and licensed from the Austin Motor Company in Birmingham, England.
BMW's first significant
aircraft engine was the BMW IIIa inline-six liquid-cooled engine of 1918, much preferred
for its high-altitude performance.[10] With German rearmament in the 1930s, the company
again began producing aircraft engines for the Luftwaffe. Among its successful World War II engine designs
were the BMW 132 and BMW 801 air-cooled radial engines, and the
pioneering BMW 003 axial-flow turbojet, which powered the tiny, 1944–1945–era jet-powered
"emergency fighter", the Heinkel He 162 Spatz. The BMW 003 jet engine was tested in the A-1b version of the
world's first jet fighter, the Messerschmitt Me 262, but
BMW engines failed on takeoff, a major setback for the Emergency Fighter
Program until successful testing
with Junkers engines.[11][12] Towards the end of the Third Reich BMW developed
some military aircraft projects for the Luftwaffe,
the BMW Strahlbomber,
the BMW
Schnellbomber and the BMW Strahljäger,
but none of them were built.[13][14]
By the year 1959, the automotive
division of BMW was in financial difficulties and a shareholders meeting was
held to decide whether to go into liquidation or find a way of carrying on. It
was decided to carry on and to try to cash in on the current economy car boom
enjoyed so successfully by some of Germany's ex-aircraft manufacturers such as Messerschmitt and Heinkel. The rights to manufacture the
Italian Iso Isetta were bought; the tiny cars themselves were to be
powered by a modified form of BMW's own motorcycle engine. This was moderately
successful and helped the company get back on its feet. The controlling
majority shareholder of the BMWAktiengesellschaft since 1959 is the Quandt family, which owns about 46% of the
stock. The rest is in public float.
BMW acquired the Hans Glas company based in Dingolfing, Germany, in
1966. It was reputed that the acquisition was mainly to gain access to Glas'
development of the timing belt with an overhead camshaft in automotive
applications.[15] Glas vehicles were
briefly badged as BMW until the company was fully absorbed.

In 1992, BMW acquired a large
stake in California based industrial design studio DesignworksUSA, which they fully acquired in 1995. In 1994,
BMW bought the British Rover Group[16] (which at the time consisted of the Rover, Land Rover and MG brands as well as the rights to defunct brands
including Austin and Morris), and owned it for
six years. By 2000, Rover was incurring huge losses and BMW decided to sell the
combine. The MG and Rover brands were sold to the Phoenix Consortium to form MG Rover, while Land Rover
was taken over by Ford. BMW, meanwhile,
retained the rights to build the new Mini, which was launched in 2001.
Chief designer Chris Bangle announced his departure
from BMW in February 2009, after serving on the design team for nearly
seventeen years.[17] He was replaced by Adrian van Hooydonk,
Bangle's former right hand man. Bangle was known for his radical designs such as
the 2002 7-Series and the 2002 Z4. In July 2007, the production rights for Husqvarna Motorcycles was purchased by BMW for a reported 93 million
euros. BMW Motorrad plans to continue
operating Husqvarna Motorcycles as a separate enterprise. All development,
sales and production activities, as well as the current workforce, have
remained in place at its present location at Varese.
In June 2012, BMW was
listed as the #1 most reputable company in the world by Forbes.com.[18] Rankings are based upon aspects such as
"people's willingness to buy, recommend, work for, and invest in a company
is driven 60% by their perceptions of the company and only 40% by their
perceptions of their products."
BMW began production of motorcycle engines and then motorcycles
after World War I.[23] Its motorcycle brand is
now known as BMW Motorrad. Their first successful motorcycle, after the failed
Helios and Flink, was the "R32" in 1923. This
had a "boxer" twin engine,
in which a cylinder projects into the air-flow from each side of the machine.
Apart from their single-cylinder models (basically to the same pattern), all
their motorcycles used this distinctive layout until the early 1980s. Many BMWs
are still produced in this layout, which is designated the R Series.
During the Second World War, BMW produced the BMW R75 motorcycle with a sidecar attached. Having a
unique design copied from the Zündapp KS750, its sidecar wheel
was also motor-driven. Combined with a lockable differential,
this made the vehicle very capable off-road, an equivalent in many ways to the Jeep.
In 1982, came the K Series, shaft drive but water-cooled and with either three
or four cylinders mounted in a straight line from front to back. Shortly after,
BMW also started making the chain-driven F and G series with single and parallel twin Rotax engines.
In the early 1990s, BMW updated the airhead Boxer engine which became known as the oilhead. In 2002, the oilhead engine had
two spark plugs per cylinder. In 2004 it added a built-in balance shaft, an
increased capacity to 1,170 cc and enhanced performance to 100 hp
(75 kW) for the R1200GS, compared to 85 hp (63 kW) of the previous R1150GS. More powerful variants of the oilhead engines are
available in the R1100S and R1200S, producing 98 hp (73 kW) and
122 hp (91 kW), respectively.
In 2004, BMW introduced the new K1200S Sports Bike which marked a
departure for BMW. It had an engine producing 167 hp (125 kW),
derived from the company's work with the Williams F1 team, and is lighter than
previous K models. Innovations include electronically adjustable front and rear
suspension, and a Hossack-type front fork that BMW calls Duolever.