Spijkstaal


Spijkstaal is a Dutch car company from Spijkenisse, South Holland. They specialized in electric cars, especially trucks for industrial usage, and their electric carts are used in Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, flower auctions such as those of Royal FloraHolland, and military airfields. Among the general public, Spijkstaal is mostly known for being the manufacturer of mobile grocery stores.

History

In 1934 Gerrit Neuteboom, a smith from Spijkenisse, won first prize in an agricultural exhibition in Kruiningen in Zeeland with a steel-framed farm wagon with pneumatic tires, which could therefore bear heavier loads and took less horse power to pull. In 1938 he founded the company Spijkstaal, producing wagons for the agricultural sector. In the fifties the company diversifies to produce trailers, but also windows and construction work, as well as movable bandstands in association with former-wainwright-turned-coachbuilder Henk Koornneef.
In 1995, Spijkstaal converted a conventional Volkswagen Caravelle into a fully-electric van that could hold eight passengers, part of a project testing the viability of fully electric consumer vehicles in the Netherlands. Spijkstaal provided the chassis for the ParkShuttle autonomous shuttle service in Capelle aan den IJssel and Rotterdam. Spijkstaal Elektro B.V. declared bankruptcy in 2015 and was acquired in September 2015 by Peinemann Holding, continuing to operate under the new name Spijkstaal International B.V.