Boeing celebrated an official opening Friday of a $100 million expansion at its parts facility in Gresham, Ore. that employes some 1,800 workers, of whom 23 percent are Clark County residents.
An open house and showcase event including elected officials, business groups, and construction contractors who worked on the 64,000-square-foot chemical processing plant and a 34,000-square-foot addition to an existing building. The plant housed equipment and chemical baths used to treat machined parts to be used in Boeing 7-series airplanes, including the Dreamliner, that are assembled in Everett and Renton, as well as at the company’s South Carolina plant. Workers at the Gresham facility make parts from aluminum, steel, titanium, magnesium and other specialized metals.
“This new facility and expansion project represents the state-of-the-art in metal parts finishing,” Perry Moore, the Gresham plant’s Portland general manager, said in a statement. “Not only is it a tangible representation of the confidence the Boeing company places in the Portland workforce, it also represents an environmentally progressive and efficient production model for other manufacturing facilities to follow.”
The chemical processing facility meets the LEED, or Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, Gold standard, and the sepa