We’re starting with some exciting news in today’s 3D Printing News Briefs: Stratasys just celebrated the opening of its new North American headquarters in Minnesota. Moving on, Nanoscribe is scaling manufacturing capabilities for some of its most popular 3D printing photoresins, and RIC Robotics is working to scale adoption of autonomous additive construction. We’ll end with news about 3D printed shoes.
Stratasys Holds Grand Opening Event for Americas Headquarters
Ribbon-cutting ceremony at the grand opening of Stratasys’ Americas Regional Corporate Headquarters in Minnetonka, Minnesota, with Stratasys leaders, partners, and community guests, including Rich Garrity, Scott and Lisa Crump.
Days after announcing its acquisition of Markforged, 3D printing leader Stratasys celebrated the grand opening of its new Americas Regional Corporate Headquarters (ARCH) in Minnetonka, Minnesota. In addition to company leadership, partners, customers, and community stakeholders, several VIPs made the guest list, including United States Representative Betty McCollum, United States Representative Brad Finstad, United States Representative Kelly Morrison, EVP of the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) Erin Streeter, and Stratasys Board Member Scott Crump, who invented fused deposition modeling (FDM), and his wife Lisa Crump, Stratasys Co-Founder. ARCH is a 200,000 square-foot facility, housing advanced R&D, applications expertise, engineering, customer collaboration capabilities, and on-demand manufacturing business Stratasys Direct. The opening comes after an independent audit of the company’s Environmental, Health, and Safety (EHS) management systems at the campus in Minnetonka; the audit confirmed alignment with ISO 14001 and ISO 45001 standards. ARCH drives home just how committed Stratasys is to the U.S. market.
“Bringing our teams together under one roof has a meaningful impact on how we operate, innovate, and serve our customers. ARCH gives us the scale and workspace to accelerate collaboration across engineering, manufacturing, and customer facing teams, enabling faster delivery of high-quality solutions,” said Rich Garrity, Chief Business Unit Officer of Stratasys and NAM Board Member.
Nanoscribe Invests in Expanding Manufacturing Capabilities for Key Photoresins
Selected high-demand photoresins, now manufactured with industrial-grade quality and available with batch-specific Certificates of Analysis (CoA).
High-precision 3D microfabrication market leader Nanoscribe is seeing increased industrial demand for its photoresins, and is meeting that demand by scaling up manufacturing capabilities for five of its requested materials. Early demand for its two-photon polymerization (2PP) and two-photon grayscale lithography (2GL) systems mostly came from academic research facilities, but last year, every third system the company sold went to industry, particularly in photonics packaging and optics manufacturing applic
We’re starting with some exciting news in today’s 3D Printing News Briefs: Stratasys just celebrated the opening of its new North American headquarters in Minnesota. Moving on, Nanoscribe is scaling manufacturing capabilities for some of its most popular 3D printing photoresins, and RIC Robotics is working to scale adoption of autonomous additive construction. We’ll end with news about 3D printed shoes.
Stratasys Holds Grand Opening Event for Americas Headquarters
Ribbon-cutting ceremony at the grand opening of Stratasys’ Americas Regional Corporate Headquarters in Minnetonka, Minnesota, with Stratasys leaders, partners, and community guests, including Rich Garrity, Scott and Lisa Crump.
Days after announcing its acquisition of Markforged, 3D printing leader Stratasys celebrated the grand opening of its new Americas Regional Corporate Headquarters (ARCH) in Minnetonka, Minnesota. In addition to company leadership, partners, customers, and community stakeholders, several VIPs made the guest list, including United States Representative Betty McCollum, United States Representative Brad Finstad, United States Representative Kelly Morrison, EVP of the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) Erin Streeter, and Stratasys Board Member Scott Crump, who invented fused deposition modeling (FDM), and his wife Lisa Crump, Stratasys Co-Founder. ARCH is a 200,000 square-foot facility, housing advanced R&D, applications expertise, engineering, customer collaboration capabilities, and on-demand manufacturing business Stratasys Direct. The opening comes after an independent audit of the company’s Environmental, Health, and Safety (EHS) management systems at the campus in Minnetonka; the audit confirmed alignment with ISO 14001 and ISO 45001 standards. ARCH drives home just how committed Stratasys is to the U.S. market.
“Bringing our teams together under one roof has a meaningful impact on how we operate, innovate, and serve our customers. ARCH gives us the scale and workspace to accelerate collaboration across engineering, manufacturing, and customer facing teams, enabling faster delivery of high-quality solutions,” said Rich Garrity, Chief Business Unit Officer of Stratasys and NAM Board Member.
Nanoscribe Invests in Expanding Manufacturing Capabilities for Key Photoresins
Selected high-demand photoresins, now manufactured with industrial-grade quality and available with batch-specific Certificates of Analysis (CoA).
High-precision 3D microfabrication market leader Nanoscribe is seeing increased industrial demand for its photoresins, and is meeting that demand by scaling up manufacturing capabilities for five of its requested materials. Early demand for its two-photon polymerization (2PP) and two-photon grayscale lithography (2GL) systems mostly came from academic research facilities, but last year, every third system the company sold went to industry, particularly in photonics packaging and optics manufacturing applic