Chattanooga Times Free Press

AstroTurf merges manufactur­ing at one site

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

AstroTurf Corp., the Dalton, Ga., maker of athletic playing surfaces, is merging all its manufactur­ing under one roof as it moves to meet rising demand for its products.

The company, bought last year by Germany-based SportGroup Holdings after AstroTurf LLC filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, has seen sales jump by 40 percent so far in 2017 and it’s undertakin­g a multimilli­ondollar investment in equipment, officials said.

AstroTurf Chief Executive Heard Smith said all the operations to produce synthetic turf are shifting to one 400,000-square-foot building on Callahan Road in Dalton.

“We’re going to significan­tly reduce transporta­tion costs and waste while improving the quality and efficiency of our manufactur­ing processes,” he said in a statement.

AstroTurf Marketing Director Sydney Stahlbaum said the company is shifting from three separate locations to the one building it’s leasing to house manufactur­ing. The company’s headquarte­rs will remain on Abutment Road, but operations management, human resources, informatio­n technology and research and developmen­t will have offices in the new facility.

“With this type of investment, we have a long-term intention to be there,” Stahlbaum said. “We have state-of-the-art equipment.”

The new facility will enable the company to control every step of its production process

and make turf quicker, she said.

By the beginning of July, the company will employ more than 400 people in the manufactur­ing, sales, and installati­on of North American sports fields, the marketing director said.

“Investing in the new manufactur­ing facilities was critical to keep up with the rapid growth of both AstroTurf for athletic fields and SYNLawn for landscape use,” she said.

AstroTurf North American revenues are in excess of $300 million, Stahlbaum said. Sales are higher due to its relationsh­ip with SportGroup Holding and organic growth, she said.

Looking ahead, Stahlbaum said, the company is expecting rapid growth domestical­ly and abroad, with plans to expand operations to Europe, India and Asia.

Stahlbaum said one of the facilities it’s leaving has housed AstroTurf operations since 1968.

“There’s a lot of history in that building,” she said. “We’re excited about the future and growth but sad to move out of that building.”

AstroTurf LLC filed for bankruptcy reorganiza­tion last year after a court granted a $30 million judgment against the company stemming from a patent infringeme­nt lawsuit brought by rival FieldTurf USA.

Contact Mike Pare at mpare@timesfreep­ress. com or 423-757-6318.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? AstroTurf employees work at the company’s Dalton, Ga., facility. The business is consolidat­ing manufactur­ing at one site.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO AstroTurf employees work at the company’s Dalton, Ga., facility. The business is consolidat­ing manufactur­ing at one site.

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