I started Bollinger Motors in an old diesel repair shop in upstate New York with six people and a conviction that a better truck was possible. We built it. Then we built it again, and again. Three generations. Hundreds of people. Thousands of parts. One commercial truck that made it all the way to production. Then the whole thing was gone. Sold. Out of my hands. For a while I thought that was the end of the story.
It wasn't. The trucks came back. The machines came back. The knowledge and the relationships and the hunger — all of it came back. I've been through a lot. Everyone who worked on this has been through a lot. But we wouldn't give it up for anything. This is in our bones.
Now it's time for a new beginning. A new story. A new direction. I want to make things again — real things, designed from conviction, built without permission. I want to work with young designers who are hungry and haven't had their instincts beaten out of them yet. I want Bollinger Motors to be a place where serious creative work happens — in the studio, in the lab, in classrooms, and in the field. Let's see where it can go.
— Robert Bollinger