KB Khimavtomatiki/VMZ
The Energiya core stage’s RD-0120 engines were designed by the Design Bureau of Chemical Automatics (KB Khimavtomatiki or KBKhA) in Voronezh. This bureau was founded in 1941 by Semyon A. Kosberg in the city of Berdsk and was transferred to Voronezh as OKB-154 in 1946. Kosberg headed the bureau until he was killed in an automobile accident in 1965 and replaced by Aleksandr D. Konopatov, who remained in charge of the bureau until 1993. The bureau developed engines for surface-to-air missiles, submarine-launched and intercontinental ballistic missiles, and entered the space business in the late 1950s with the development of upper-stage engines for R-7 derived launch vehicles. It also designed the second and third-stage engines for the Proton rocket. KBKhA was a newcomer to the development of cryogenic engines when it was assigned to develop the RD-0120. Chief designer of the RD-0120 was Vladimir S. Rachuk, who would go on to become the general designer of KBKhA in 1993.
Actual manufacturing of the RD-0120 engines took place at the Voronezh Machine Building Factory (VMZ), located on the same premises as KBKhA.
Founded in 1928, VMZ switched to the production of rocket engines in 1957, building all the engines designed at KBKhA [5].