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DEEP Manufacturing launches 50,000 sq.
Expansion
2 min read

DEEP Manufacturing launches 50,000 sq.

Deep Manufacturing
Deep Manufacturing

Hardware

Originally reported by VoxelMatters

DEEP Manufacturing launches 50,000 sq. ft. WAAM facility in Houston, Texas, one year ahead of schedule. The site, which received its first manufacturing systems in late 2025, will operate four wire arc additive manufacturing (WAAM) platforms at launch to produce carbon steel and nickel-based alloy components, including Inconel 625. This expansion is part of a broader $100 million investment strategy by the UK-based parent company to establish a permanent engineering and development hub in the United States. The facility will debut on May 6, 2026, featuring a pressure-rated vessel certified to DNV standards.

This move positions DEEP Manufacturing directly within the US energy, defense, and maritime industrial clusters, addressing the critical need for localized supply chains for large-format, high-integrity metal components. By utilizing WAAM, the company competes with traditional casting and forging providers by offering reduced lead times for massive, complex geometries. While competitors often struggle with the certification of large-scale printed parts, the DNV-certified pressure vessel demonstrates a clear focus on meeting the stringent regulatory requirements of the oil, gas, and subsea sectors.

For industrial buyers, the primary value proposition of this facility is the reduction of logistics-related lead times for heavy-duty components. Success for DEEP Manufacturing will depend on their ability to maintain consistent material properties across their four WAAM platforms while scaling post-processing and inspection workflows to meet high-volume demand. Buyers should prioritize evaluating the site's capacity for rapid qualification of new alloys beyond the current Inconel 625 and carbon steel baseline.

Topics

DEEP ManufacturingWAAMInconel 625Houstonadditive manufacturingDNV certificationmetal 3D printingindustrial manufacturing

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