Cool initiative: Audi Occupational Health joins in the Tetris Challenge

Audi Occupational Health is celebrating its 100th anniversary in 2020. What started out small in 1920 has developed into a big success story: The first paramedic was hired a century ago in Neckarsulm to respond to emergencies and injuries suffered by his colleagues. Today, Audi Occupational Health applies sustainable and holistic practices to the subject of health: Well over one hundred health experts are responsible for acute emergency care and individual prevention, for ergonomic, safe and health-preserving design of workstations, and for the mental health of Audi employees.

More about the #TetrisChallenge

For some time now, people have been posting photos online with the hashtag #TetrisChallenge, showing an overhead view of fire department or police equipment, among other things. It all started with the police in the canton of Zurich. They published a picture on Instagram of an emptied-out police car, two officers and their equipment – from handcuffs and a warning triangle to a bulletproof vest. Underneath was the comment: “If you’ve always wondered what’s inside a traffic police patrol car – voilà.” Since then, thousands of photos showing the interiors of the vehicles used by police or fire departments, for example, have been posted online under the hashtag #TetrisChallenge.

Ready for the Audi e-tron: Audi equips FC Bayern training grounds with charging points

An electrifying partnership: The training grounds of FC Bayern Munich are getting ready for the Audi e-tron. Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Chairman of the Executive Board of FC Bayern München AG, Oliver Kahn, Member of the Executive Board of FC Bayern München AG, and Audi Board Member for Sales Hildegard Wortmann gave the go-ahead for the construction of 38 charging points yesterday. The charging points are to go online in late summer – just in time for the start of the next Bundesliga season, from which point the professional soccer players of FC Bayern will be driving the Audi e-tron, the brand’s first fully electric SUV. The record-holding players and their team will be able to charge their future electric cars with up to 150 kilowatts in the underground garage at the home of FC Bayern on Säbener Strasse. At the start of next year, Audi also wants to equip the Allianz Arena in Munich with charging points – fans and visitors to the stadium will then also benefit from them.

Back in January, FC Bayern Munich and Audi announced that they were extending their partnership until 2029. In the next few years, both partners want to work together strategically on innovative marketing campaigns and electrification in particular. More than half of FC Bayern’s Audi fleet will be electrified as of the fall. This will allow FC Bayern to lower its fleet emissions to less than 95 grams of CO2 per kilometer for the start of the Bundesliga season, making an important contribution toward sustainability. This meets the statutory requirement for manufacturer fleets, which applies as of January 2021.

Discover the Production of the Audi e-tron GT interactively

The electrically driven Audi e-tron GT and the Audi R8* will drive off the production line together at the Audi Neckarsulm site at the end of 2020. This is a special feature in the Volkswagen Group. The preparations for integrating the e-tron GT into production at the Böllinger Höfe have been underway since 2019. To make this novelty accessible for everyone, Audi has created an interactive graphic under this link: https://www.audi-mediacenter.com/en/neckarsulm-199

The responsive graphic can be accessed via the page of the Audi Neckarsulm site in the Audi Media Center using any mobile device. Texts, photos, videos – all information on modifications and new production facilities as well as on employee trainings can now be found there.

Red markers in the virtual Böllinger Höfe lead to topic areas such as logistics, body shop, and assembly or to the showroom or brief introductions of employees. In many areas, there are even more details to discover, such as videos that show the progress of construction during modification work.

Additional content concerning the production of the electric sports car will be added to the interactive graphic up to the official introduction of the Audi e-tron GT in 2021. It is available in English and German.

*Fuel consumption of the models named above:

Audi R8:
Combined fuel consumption in l/100 km: 13.3–12.9 (17.7–18.2 US mpg)
Combined CO2 emissions in g/km: 301–293 (484.4–471.5 g/mi)
(Fuel consumption, CO2 emission figures and efficiency classes given in ranges depend on the tire/wheel sets used)

Audi Live – Virtual launch of the new Audi A4 Sedan

Audi Live - Virtual launch of the new Audi A4 Sedan

In the first episode of our new Audi Live show, we present to you Audi’s best-selling model worldwide- the new Audi A4. With a brand new exterior design, some of the latest technology as well as a whole suite of new digital connectivity features, find out what makes the new Audi A4 a worthy successor to the outgoing model.

Tune in at 10 PM SGT (GMT +08) on 6 July for the virtual launch.

To find out more about the new Audi A4, launch offers, as well as to make a test drive booking, visit http://www.audi.com.sg/newA4

Anniversary in the year of the coronavirus: 100 years of health protection at Audi

The first full-time paramedic started working at NSU, a predecessor of the four rings, in Neckarsulm in 1920, marking the birth of professional health protection at Audi. In the beginning, the focus was on caring for employees in the event of injuries or acute emergency situations. This aspect is still an essential element today. “If something happens at the plant, for example if somebody has a heart attack, we usually arrive at the scene within three minutes. This proximity and speed of action helps to save lives,” says Andreas Haller, Head of Audi Occupational Health. Health protection at the four rings now has many facets, ranging from acute and emergency medical attendance, preventative occupational health care, individual prevention, and the inclusion of employees who receive consultation on their job due to health-related limitations, and all the way to workplace design itself, which should be ergonomic, safe, and maintain the employees’ health. “Most recently, we made the workstations at Audi ‘coronavirus-ready,’ for example. We work very closely and very successfully with many partners in the company in this area,” says Haller.

The Works Council is an important partner in this cooperation. Peter Mosch, Chairman of the General Works Council of AUDI AG: “To us as the employee representation, accident prevention in the company and our colleagues’ health are very important. If you look back at the beginnings of industrial work – including in the automotive industry – and compare that with today’s occupational safety standards, it is clear that things have come along way at both the company and political levels over the past 100 years. I am very grateful to all the members of the in-house occupational health protection committees – on-site company doctors, managers, and members of the Works Council – who are working together with great commitment to set a high standard for health protection at Audi.”

The spectrum of Audi Health Protection extends from the Audi Checkup and “Jeder hat Psyche” all the way to operations outside the plant gates

What started out small in 1920 has evolved tremendously over the space of a century. Today, there are three Occupational Health Centers at the two Audi sites in Germany: one in Neckarsulm and two in Ingolstadt. More than 100 employees see to the wellbeing of their colleagues at Audi – in Germany, but also at the international locations of the four rings, together with their medical colleagues on-site. In Belgium, Mexico, and Hungary, for example, there are separate branches for employee health protection. The range of services of Audi Occupational Health has also increased considerably in the course of the decades: Today, health protection comprises not only occupational health care and the prevention of work-related illnesses and occupational illnesses, company health and integration management, acute and emergency medical care but also individual preventive health. For example, the Audi Checkup was established in 2006:

The aim is to identify health risks early on, prevent chronic illnesses, and convey knowledge on health-conscious behavior. Roughly 90 percent of employees take advantage of this voluntary examination and preventive program regularly. Since the program started in 2006, more than 100,000 employees have take part, and more than 10,000 Audi employees went for a checkup in 2019 alone. The Audi Checkup is part of the works agreement on health, on the basis of which the company and Works Council have committed to maintaining, promoting, and restoring the physical and mental health of the employees.

Audi Health Protection doesn’t just do what is expected but also goes the extra mile: for example with the current campaign “Jeder hat Psyche. Why not talk about it?”. This campaign has been in existence since last year’s World Mental Health Day (October 10). The project aims to promote a more natural approach to the topic of mental health and thereby contribute to destigmatizing mental illness. The employees involved in the project provide information at company events, hold their own information events, distribute flyers and other information material, and raise awareness about points of contact for Occupational Health, such as the established consultation hour on mental health or the consultation hour on addiction. The four rings have had offers relating to mental health for a long time, but it was the current campaign that provided many employees with an incentive to open up and talk more openly about their own issues or offer their help to affected colleagues.

Occupational Health also takes social responsibility, for example with its offering for employees to register with the worldwide database for the battle against leukemia during their working hours. Audi has been working with the relevant institutions in this field for many years and pays the laboratory costs for typing. As a result, there are numerous stem cell donors – and thus lifesavers – among the Audi employees.

Audi paramedics responded to more than 1,300 external emergencies

Speaking of lifesavers: The Audi emergency paramedics are not there just for the Audi employees but also for the people who live at the locations. On the basis of corresponding agreements, they can also respond to emergencies outside of the plant gates. This is the case, for example, if the local rescue control center determines that the Audi emergency medical service is closer and can therefore get to the site of the accident more quickly than another emergency medical service. In 2019 alone, the Audi paramedics were called to more than 1,300 external emergencies to cover peak demand. Audi “chief physician” Haller says: “We are happy to do our bit for our home regions here. At the same time, we benefit from these emergency responses as well: Our paramedics are always very well trained.” As regards the Audi workforce, occupational physician Haller has one big goal: “We want our employees to be fit and healthy when they start their well-deserved retirement after reaching retirement age.”