| |||||||||
FSO is an abbreviation of Fabryka Samochodów Osobowych, which means in Polish Passenger Car Factory, simply.
The FSO plant was established in 1951 by the Polish state in the northern part (Zeran) of Warsaw to produce automobiles for postwar Poland. The first product of FSO was Warszawa (big limousine and kombi) manufactured under the Soviet Pobieda licence.
Later, the small Syrena model was introduced. In the early 1970s an agreement was concluded with the Italian Fiat company to build a new middle-class model, called Polski Fiat 125. This model was produced until 1991. The state-owned company developed a new middle-class model named FSO Polonez, equipped with a liftback body.
After 1989 the problems of insufficient technology emerged and in mid-1990s the company was bought by Daewoo Motors (that collapsed in 2001).
Nowadays, FSO is an independent company and produces the following models: Polonez Plus: Caro (liftback) and Atu (sedan), Lanos (under the Daewoo license - hatchback, sedan) and