⛵ Sailboat DB

Vindo (Nötesund Varv AB)

Active: 1928 – 1988

The founder of the yard Carl Andersson, was born in a family where his ancestors for at least two generations had been boat builders, building fishing boats. He started his first own company in 1926 building pilot vessels mostly, beside a few crafts for leisure. During the thirties he was known to be a skilled builder of boats like Dragons, A22 and 5.5m for regattas and double enders, "koster" in Swedish. Most of the boats were sailing yachts but there were also some remarkable motor cruisers. Later, in the fifties they built folk boats among all the others.\r\nIn the early sixties the son Karl-Erik Andersson who was an engineer in ship building, took over the management of the yard since Carl was getting older and not so strong any more. Carl remained by the drawing table though.\r\nDuring this time there came a man from Germany called Christhoph Rassy seeking employment in the yard where he worked some years before starting his own.\r\nThe first of the boats in the Vindö range was a 26 footer called Vindö 28 built in wood in 1961 which could be considered as a mile stone in the history of the yard and Karl-Erik soon had to expand the business. Beside the 28 the building of various craft continued.\r\nIn 1963 Carl constructed the Vindö 30 with a length of 9 m and shortly after the Vindö 18, 6 m long. In 1964 came the Vindö 22 a smaller version of the Vindö 30.\r\nIn 1965 the skilled crafts men of the yard made the plug to the famous Vega and they also made the plug for the International Folk Boat.\r\nThrough this work they came in contact with the GRP and shortly after the first Vindö in GRP was made, the Vindö 18 and the year after the Vindö 30 also converted into GRP.\r\nIn the late sixties came the Vindö 50 and the 22 also transformed into GRP.\r\nIn 1971 the sailing plug of the Vindö 40 was the last yacht made of wood built in the yard. \r\nIn 1973 came the Vindö 32. Then to have something big to offer they imported a 46-foot hull from England where it was known as Bowman 46 or the Corsair. The yard completed the yachts but it never became any success so only a few were completed under the name Vindö 75.\r\nVindö 90 came in 1975 and was not made in more then a few numbers as well.\r\nCarl then constructed the Vindö 65 in 1977, 38.5 foot, which as the 50 was offered in various models.\r\nAt the peak there were about 50 employees in the yard during early seventies. Carl died in 1979 a year before the first bankruptcy in 1980. By this time the new owner group tried to modernize the range and had the designer John Lindblom, later he was with Storebro, to design the Vindö 45 introduced in 1981.\r\nAfter a new bankruptcy with a new owner taking over there was a new design presented with a superstructure in GRP. Since the Vindö was synonymous with mahogany superstructure it never got into production and the yard stopped building boats and is nowadays only making repairs and maintenance.\r\nDuring a some years other "factories" sub contracted the yard to make the interior of their boats hoping to benefit of the Vindö reputation but probably due to economical reasons never became a success. I mean that the yard probably weren't allowed to use the material nor the refined ways of building there were used to.\r\n

Boats (16)

Name LOA (ft) First Built Last Built Rig
OMEGA 30 S 30.67 1982 1986 Fractional Sloop
OMEGA 34 33.67 1981 Fractional Sloop
OMEGA 42 41.99 1978 1998 Fractional Sloop
VINDO 16 19.68 1969 Fractional Sloop
VINDO 22 23.29 1968 Masthead Sloop
VINDO 28 26.9 1960 Masthead Sloop
VINDO 30 29.85 1963 1975 Masthead Sloop
VINDO 32 29.36 1976 Masthead Sloop
VINDO 40 30.94 1970 1982 Masthead Sloop
VINDO 45 33.73 1981 1989 Masthead Sloop
VINDO 452 33.73 1990 Masthead Sloop
VINDO 50 34.94 1974 Masthead Sloop
VINDO 50 MS 34.94 1974 Masthead Ketch
VINDO 65 S 38.22 1980 Masthead Ketch
VINDO 90 42.65 1987 Masthead Ketch
VINDO 995 32.65 1987 1988 Masthead Sloop