Dayton Daily News

TISSUE CENTER’S KETTERING EXPANSION MAY ADD 200 JOBS

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer Contact this reporter at 937-2252390 or email tom.Gnau@coxinc. com.

Constructi­on started KETTERING —

Tuesday for a $50 million expansion that will double the size of the Community Tissue Services Center for Tissue Innovation and Research an expansion that

— will also create more than 200 new jobs.

The 132,000-square-foot expansion at 2900 College Drive in Kettering will more than double the organizati­on’s footprint and will house 16 new clean rooms for additional processing, distributi­on and supply chain management of grafts of tissue, bone and skin used by doctors, surgeons and dentists worldwide.

The center was built in September 2009. But its capacity was reached in just seven years, and although leaders initially explored the idea of adding just four clean rooms, they decided that any expansion would have to be bigger, said David Smith, the center’s chief executive.

“We need to be prepared for the next big jump for what we do in the future,” Smith said.

In the center’s first year of operation in Kettering, it distribute­d about 125,000 grafts.

The center distribute­d more than 600,000 tissue allografts last year — and leaders expect to distribute closer to 650,000 grafts in 2018.

The organizati­on also bills itself the largest nonprofit provider of skin grafts for burn patients.

The donated samples are used to address traumatic injuries, spine surgeries, skin grafts and other needs.

“What we do enhances lives, saves lives,” Smith said.

The work of tissue distributi­on began in 1986 when a local surgeon called the center’s sister organizati­on, the Community Blood Center, asking about tissue donations.

Christophe­r Graham, the center’s executive director of business developmen­t, said center leaders recognized then the future possibilit­ies.

Frank Wilton, CEO of the American Associatio­n of Tissue Banks, said the local operation became one of the first accredited tissue banks nationwide.

“There is a special place in my heart for CTS (Center for Tissue Services),” Wilton said.

The expansion is expected to be completed in the second quarter of 2020.

Most of the expected new jobs at the center will be in manufactur­ing and support fields.

The Community Blood Center in downtown Dayton at 349 S. Main St. will not be impacted by the expansion, Graham and Smith told the Dayton Daily News this summer. That facility is 110,000 square feet and has about 300 employees.

Community Tissue Services operates regional tissue centers in California, Texas, Tennessee, Pennsylvan­ia, Oregon and Ohio, and two satellite offices in Idaho and Oregon.

In 2017, the center distribute­d more than 600,000 tissue grafts to 5,000 hospitals, surgeons and surgery centers.

 ?? THOMAS GNAU/STAFF ?? The $50 million expansion at Community Tissue Services Center off of College Drive in Miami Valley Research Park will stretch east from the current building.
THOMAS GNAU/STAFF The $50 million expansion at Community Tissue Services Center off of College Drive in Miami Valley Research Park will stretch east from the current building.

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