Variety of quality electrical building materials produced
July 17, 2025The Pyongyang Electrical Building Materials Factory produces various kinds of quality electrical building materials and sends them to major construction sites including that of 50 000 flats in Pyongyang.
The factory’s various goods, including light switches, wall lamp sockets and outlets, get more diversified in shape with the passage of time and are winning favour with consumers as they are of good quality, pleasing to the eye and convenient to use.
“To meet the ever-increasing aesthetic tastes and cultural demand of the people, we must break stereotypes and constantly make innovations in the production of electrical building materials,” said Manager Ri Jong Yong.
Recently the factory has given full play to the creative initiative of its workers who directly make goods so that they could propose valuable technical innovation plans while examining one by one the achievements in the development of electrical building materials in the past.
It has organized a prize contest twice a year and consistently pushed ahead with the work to translate the selected excellent practical inventions into reality with great care.
It also strived to improve its workers’ technical knowledge and skills with a new methodology.
In this course, most of them became inventors and the factory seethed with the enthusiasm for mass technical innovation.
The results were very good.
According to Choe Song Il, senior engineer of the factory, it has taken a big stride in ensuring the diversity of electrical building materials with the production of nice outlets, switches and sockets inscribed with different patterns as compared with the previous ones simple in shape.
Meanwhile, the factory reuses plastic waste while focusing on recycling.
To this end, it made and installed a new crusher and formed a technical innovation team to solve the problem of mixing raw materials to improve the quality indices of products.
Thus it produces more and better building materials while saving raw materials by 25 percent.
THE PYONGYANG TIMES