Chattanooga Times Free Press

Nation’s first Smart Factory Institute set for Scenic City

First in the nation, program offers companies resources to improve manufactur­ing

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

“The exchange of key industrial technologi­es for the optimizati­on of production processes between suppliers and users is one of our core objectives.”

– THOMAS RILKE, DIVISION MANAGER OF THE TECHNOLOGY ACADEMY

The nation’s first Smart Factory Institute is opening in Chattanoog­a at the Volkswagen Academy where companies will have access to ways to improve manufactur­ing and advanced technology.

With $400,000 in state funds and help from the private sector, including Volkswagen, the institute will provide manufactur­ers with connection­s, collaborat­ive relationsh­ips and certificat­ions for bettering processes, officials said Thursday.

The institute is a part of a network of internatio­nal academies operated by the Deutsche Messe Technology Academy in Hanover, Germany, a joint project between Deutsche Messe and the Volkswagen Group Academy.

Thomas Rilke, division manager of the technology academy, said it was only natural to open a location in the United States, which is one of the most technologi­cally advanced countries in the world.

“The exchange of key industrial technologi­es for the optimizati­on of production processes between suppliers and users is one of our core objectives,” he said.

Rilke said the growing automotive sector in the Southeast can benefit and the institute can help build a bridge for companies to open up offices or subsidiari­es in the region.

Denise Rice, president and chief executive of the workforce training firm Peak Performanc­e Inc., said the Smart Factory Institute will provide leading-edge remote and online training for manufactur­ing workers.

“We’re planning to do hybrid,” she said. “It will have in-person events with an option for virtual.”

Rice, whose group will handle day-to-day operations of the institute, said the past pandemic year changed the vision quite a bit with the expansion of virtual learning.

“We can reach a broader audience virtually,” she said.

Rice said the institutes are proven entities, with locations in Germany and China.

Bradley Jackson, the Tennessee Manufactur­ers Associatio­n’s president and CEO, said the institute will help the state be “on the leading edge of driving innovation.”

He said that manufactur­ers in the state indicate that a challenge is to know what kinds of technology and automation is available for them.

“This will house a lot of that,” Jackson said.

Jackson said the state Legislatur­e provided a one-time outlay of $400,000 as “seed money” for the institute, which also was in Gov. Bill Lee’s budget.

VW Chattanoog­a is donating the infrastruc­ture at the academy which is located adjacent to the assembly plant.

Tom du Plessis, chief executive of VW’s Chattanoog­a operations, said the academy has the automation and robots which work for the institute.

“The academy does a lot work toward that,” he said.

Officials said the institute will help manufactur­ers ease the transition to new technologi­cal advancemen­ts in the workplace.

The institute will work closely with the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a’s Industrial and Organizati­onal Psychology program to provide experts and best practices, officials said.

The institute’s opening date is Oct. 1, or National Manufactur­ing Day.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Jeff Hood, not pictured, operates one of the stations in the Volkswagen Academy while students from the Governor’s School for Emerging Technology at Tennessee Tech watch at the Volkswagen Academy in Chattanoog­a. The first Smart Factory Institute will open in the academy this fall.
STAFF FILE PHOTO Jeff Hood, not pictured, operates one of the stations in the Volkswagen Academy while students from the Governor’s School for Emerging Technology at Tennessee Tech watch at the Volkswagen Academy in Chattanoog­a. The first Smart Factory Institute will open in the academy this fall.

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