Chattanooga Times Free Press

Finnish tire maker to build $360 million plant in Dayton

Rhea County’s biggest foreign investment to add 400 jobs

- BY ANDY SHER STAFF WRITER

“Nokian Tyres’ decision to locate its new operations here is a tremendous win for Rhea County and our state.”

– BILL HASLAM, GOVERNOR OF TENNESSEE

AFinnish tire maker plans to build a $360 million plant in Dayton, Tenn., to expand its sales across North America.

Nokian Tyres, headquarte­red in Finland with a North American sales office in Vermont, plans to hire 400 workers to produce 4 million tires a year in the first phase of its new tire production plant and the company could add hundreds of more workers in future expansions, officials said Wednesday.

“With this investment, we will get the needed capacity for growth,” Nokian Tyres’ Chairman Petteri Walldén said in a statement Wednesday. “And while the Dayton factory clearly enables us to serve our North American customers better and more efficientl­y, it also improves our production capabiliti­es and customer service throughout our global operations.”

Gov. Bill Haslam said the project represents the largest direct foreign investment in Rhea County history and will focus on manufactur­ing passenger, SUV and light-truck tires.

“Nokian Tyres’ decision to locate its new operations here is a tremendous win for Rhea County and our state, ” Haslam said in a statement.

Constructi­on of the 830,000-squarefoot plant is scheduled to begin in early 2018, and tire production is slated to start by 2020. Nokian Tyres plans to acquire most of the 330-acre Rail Hub South

industrial park that the city of Dayton developed north of the La-Z-Boy plant in Dayton over the past two years to accommodat­e a major industry needing rail access provided along the Norfolk Southern rail line.

Nokian Tyres’ Interim President and CEO Andrei Pantioukho­v said the Dayton plant “shows our commitment to our customers in one of our most important growth areas.

“The Dayton/Rhea County site was selected based on several factors, including skilled workforce availabili­ty, logistical advantages and a business-friendly administra­tion,” Pantioukho­v said.

Walldén said the Dayton site provides “needed capacity for growth” in the future for additional expansions as the Finnish tire maker tries to move from supplying replacemen­t tires in the secondary automotive market to becoming a first-tier supplier for new car makers.

Nokian supplies tires for cars, trucks and special heavy machinery mainly in areas with special challenges for tire performanc­e including snow, forests and harsh driving conditions in different seasons.

Local officials expressed gratitude to Nokian Tyres for its commitment to Rhea County.

“This investment will forever change the economic landscape of our entire region and provide hundreds of great paying jobs right here in Dayton,” Dayton Mayor Gary Louallen said.

Rhea County had the highest jobless rate of any of Tennessee’s 95 counties last month with 8.8 percent of the workforce without jobs following the closing of Goodman Manufactur­ing and Fujifilm Holdings last year.

Rhea County Mayor George Thacker said it was “a great regional and statewide team effort to align the resources to deliver the plan for long term success.”

Chattanoog­a State Community College will help train workers for the new plant and the Tennessee Valley Authority and the state of Tennessee offered financial incentives for the project, along with expected property tax breaks from local government­s in Rhea County.

Dennis Tumlin, executive director of the Rhea Economic & Tourism Council, said “our local partnershi­p with the Greater Chattanoog­a Economic Partnershi­p (created through Thrive 2055) along with the entire Team Tennessee has created this opportunit­y that will be felt for the next 50 years in our community.”

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ARTIST’SRENDERING ?? This is an artist’s rendering of the proposed Nokian Tyres tire plant in Dayton, Tenn.
CONTRIBUTE­D ARTIST’SRENDERING This is an artist’s rendering of the proposed Nokian Tyres tire plant in Dayton, Tenn.

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