Skip to main content
DEEP Manufacturing expands into Houston with 50,000 sq ft WAAM facility and $10 million US investment plan.
Expansion
2 min read

DEEP Manufacturing expands into Houston with 50,000 sq ft WAAM facility and $10 million US investment plan.

Deep Manufacturing
Deep Manufacturing

Hardware

Originally reported by 3D Printing Industry

DEEP Manufacturing expands into Houston with 50,000 sq ft WAAM facility and $10 million US investment plan. DEEP Manufacturing has opened a 50,000 sq ft facility in Houston, Texas, to scale its Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing (WAAM) operations for the energy, defense, and maritime sectors. The site, which will be fully operational by May 6, 2026, currently houses four robotic systems with plans for further expansion. CEO Peter Richards confirmed the company is targeting a workforce of 30 employees by year-end, supported by a $10 million investment strategy for US advanced manufacturing through 2026. The facility is currently conducting deposition trials with Inconel 625 and preparing for DNV certification of pressure-rated vessels.

This expansion positions DEEP Manufacturing directly within the US energy corridor, competing with established DED service providers and traditional casting foundries. By localizing WAAM production, the company addresses the critical need for shorter lead times in high-integrity component manufacturing, particularly for subsea and industrial infrastructure. The shift toward domestic production of large-scale metal components reflects a broader trend of regionalizing supply chains to mitigate logistics risks. The company's ability to achieve DNV certification for WAAM-produced pressure vessels will be a key differentiator in securing high-stakes contracts in the oil and gas and maritime industries.

DEEP Manufacturing must now successfully navigate the DNV audit process and demonstrate consistent material properties in Inconel 625 and carbon steel at scale. The transition from UK-based expertise to a fully autonomous Houston team will determine the facility's operational efficiency. Buyers should prioritize evaluating the mechanical consistency of these large-format parts against traditional forged alternatives to validate the business case for adoption.

Topics

DEEP ManufacturingWire Arc Additive ManufacturingWAAMInconel 625EnergyHoustonDNV certificationMetal AM

How This Connects

5 related events
  1. Same pattern

    SMR 3D Printing Production Support Center Co-Hosts WAAM Commercialization Symposium in Changwon on May 13

  2. Same pattern

    Orano Federal Services and UNC Charlotte investigate additive manufacturing for nuclear transportation cask impact limiters

  3. This article

    DEEP Manufacturing expands into Houston with 50,000 sq ft WAAM facility and $10 million US investment plan.

  4. Same pattern

    Laser Zentrum Hannover develops underwater DED system for in-situ steel structural repairs.

  5. Same pattern

    Aconity3D introduces multi-material capability for its AconityWIRE DED system.

  6. Company story

    DEEP Manufacturing has secured ISO 45001 certification from DNV, reinforcing the industrial maturity of their synchronized 6-arm WAAM production environment.