
Stratasys opens Americas Regional Corporate Headquarters in Minnetonka, Minnesota
Hardware
Originally reported by polyformnext.de
Stratasys has officially opened its Americas Regional Corporate Headquarters (ARCH) in Minnetonka, Minnesota, consolidating engineering, R&D, application expertise, and customer collaboration under one roof. The facility houses Stratasys Direct, the company's on-demand manufacturing arm, and was inaugurated with a ceremony attended by US Congress members Betty McCollum, Brad Finstad, and Kelly Morrison, as well as co-founder Scott Crump and his wife Lisa Crump. CEO Dr. Yoav Zeif stated that the ARCH brings together the resources needed to advance industrial-scale additive manufacturing, while Chief Business Unit Officer Rich Garrity noted that co-locating teams accelerates internal workflows and customer support. The site also achieved ISO 14001 and ISO 45001 certification for environmental and occupational health management, and Stratasys has launched local partnerships with High Tech Kids and FIRST Robotics.
This expansion is a deliberate move to deepen Stratasys' position in the industrial AM value chain at a time when the market is splitting between high-volume production and specialized application services. By co-locating its Direct service bureau with engineering and customer-facing teams, Stratasys is betting that hands-on application support and rapid prototyping-to-production transitions will differentiate it from competitors like 3D Systems and HP, who are also investing in service-led models. The ARCH functions as both a competence center and a live demonstration facility for aerospace, automotive, medical, and dental applications, signaling that Stratasys sees service economics and qualification support — not just printer sales — as the primary growth lever in the Americas. The Minnesota location also aligns with the broader US defense and aerospace push for domestic AM capacity, though Stratasys has not explicitly tied this site to defense contracts.
For Stratasys, the ARCH is a practical bet that physical proximity between application engineers and customers reduces the friction that still limits AM adoption in regulated verticals. The real test will be whether this facility generates measurable reductions in qualification timelines or service turnaround for aerospace and medical clients, or whether it remains a showcase. Buyers evaluating Stratasys for production should ask how the ARCH's co-location translates into faster DFAM support and shorter lead times compared to the company's existing service network.
Topics