GWM says it is “disappointed” by the sale of the historic Lang Lang Proving Ground in Victoria, but insists the move won’t derail its local vehicle tuning and development plans.

The sprawling 877-hectare Lang Lang facility southeast of Melbourne was built by General Motors and opened in 1957, before being sold to Vietnamese automaker VinFast for about $35 million in 2020 when GM shuttered the Holden brand. VinFast in turn put it on the market in 2021 after abandoning plans to enter Australia’s new-vehicle market.

Since then, various automakers have used Lang Lang for ride and handling development in Australia.

GWM had taken up a permanent residency at the testing facility in July 2025 to conduct a local chassis development program led by ex-Holden engineer Rob Trubiani, who tuned the suspension and steering of the Chinese brand’s models specifically for Australian and New Zealand conditions and customers.

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However, the proving ground has now been sold to a holding company representing DefendTex, an Australian-based defence contractor, according to documents seen by CarExpert. This sale will prevent brands like GWM from using the space for testing from the end of this month.

DefendTex is also advertising engineering jobs at its Propulsion Manufacturing team based in its Dandenong South facility, before these roles are moved to its “state-of-the-art Solid Rocket Motor Manufacturing Facility in Lang Lang, Victoria”.

Speaking to local media, GWM Australia and New Zealand chief operating officer John Kett confirmed the Chinese automaker is already progressing plans for a new Australian technical centre, which will house its engineering, training, service, and accessory development operations.

“It’s disappointing in terms of the way it’s ultimately going to be used, and all automotive companies eventually, over time, will be pushed out,” said Mr Kett.

“What we said in our announcement is we already have the plan B.”