eurekaprince
Well-known member
I get the sense that for about 25 years after AB Electrolux bought Eureka in 1974, most of Eureka's American design and manufacturing team stayed in place with minor management and supervisory changes being made by the European owners. Until the early 1990's when we started seeing more canisters made in Sweden added to the Eureka line-up, there was very little commonality between what Elux sold in Europe and what was sold in North America. Eureka's new vac designs in the 1980's may have reflected some design elements from Europe - with sleeker and lighter canisters (the Express and the Mighty Mite), and sleeker and lighter uprights (the Ultra and the Victory). So it is possible that some of the industrial designers were Swedes or influenced by Electrolux's design team in Sweden.
In the 1990's there was indeed more integration between Bloomington and Stockholm - vac designs were going in both directions. 110-volt Electrolux and Volta canisters were rebranded as Eurekas for sale in North America and 220-volt versions of Eureka uprights were rebadged as Electrolux and sold in Europe.
The death knell for Eureka happened when AB Electrolux re-acquired the rights to use their brandname once again in North America beginning in 2001. With their ability to save money by shrinking the Eureka division and just importing Electroluxes from Europe, the writing was on the wall. Upright manufacturing moved to Juarez Mexico and canisters were being imported from China and Europe. I really don't know how many American jobs were lost when Eureka's Bloomington plant closed. For all I know, those refugees from Bloomington ended up rescued by Tacony and other American companies.
The "Sanitaire by Electrolux" division remains a mystery. It remains to be see
In the 1990's there was indeed more integration between Bloomington and Stockholm - vac designs were going in both directions. 110-volt Electrolux and Volta canisters were rebranded as Eurekas for sale in North America and 220-volt versions of Eureka uprights were rebadged as Electrolux and sold in Europe.
The death knell for Eureka happened when AB Electrolux re-acquired the rights to use their brandname once again in North America beginning in 2001. With their ability to save money by shrinking the Eureka division and just importing Electroluxes from Europe, the writing was on the wall. Upright manufacturing moved to Juarez Mexico and canisters were being imported from China and Europe. I really don't know how many American jobs were lost when Eureka's Bloomington plant closed. For all I know, those refugees from Bloomington ended up rescued by Tacony and other American companies.
The "Sanitaire by Electrolux" division remains a mystery. It remains to be see