Ford’s famous Broadmeadows manufacturing site in Melbourne will become the location of a new data centre almost a decade after the automaker ended more than 90 years of producing cars in Australia.

According to The Urban Developer, the site at 300-340 Barry Road in Campbellfield will be developed by Singapore-based Zerra DC.

A planning permit lodged by Zerra with the Victorian state government proposes a six-building data centre campus on the historic site, including office space.

Having built cars in Geelong since 1925, Ford Australia opened the Broadmeadows plant in August 1959, before it introduced the first locally made Ford Falcon, codenamed XK, to showrooms the following year.

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With more than 5000 workers churning out more than 600 cars a day at its peak, the factory produced every generation of Falcon through to the final FG X, the Falcon-based Territory SUV, and long-wheelbase Fairlane and LTD models.

It also produced the Cortina small car and was the source of an ill-fated export program for the Ford Capri convertible, a Mazda MX-5 rival that ironically employed underpinnings from the Mazda 323-based Ford Laser.

The final vehicle, a Kinetic Blue-coloured FG X Falcon XR6 sedan, rolled off the Broadmeadows production line on October 7, 2016.

Ford Australia moved its Australian headquarters to the Melbourne suburb of Richmond the same year and sold the Broadmeadows plant to the Pelligra Group in 2019.