Japanese supplier Topre rekindles Ohio brownfield

Topre is building its stamping and assembly operation on a former International Harvester site, shown below in 2007, that sat dormant after it was closed in 2002.
Fast-growing Topre














 U.S. sales
2004$50 million
2017$330 million

The symbolism couldn't be more dramatic for Springfield, Ohio, as Topre America Corp. builds its expanding steel parts plant about a mile from downtown.

The western Ohio industrial town, home of an International Harvester truck plant in the 1980s, had lost more than 20,000 blue-collar jobs between 1990 and 2014. The Harvester plant closed in 2002, and the site was cleared in hopes of attracting new industrial development.

But none came.

That is, until late in 2016, when Topre, a fast-growing Japanese supplier of large, high-strength steel auto parts, decided to build a small $10 million, 20-employee plant on the old Harvester site to supply Honda of America nearby in East Liberty, Ohio.

But the original plan took wing. Barely more than a year later, Topre has expanded the plans twice, most recently last month, when it boosted the overall project to a $130 million investment that will require 289 employees when up and running in 2020.

What drove Topre's additional investment?

It was partly the idea of helping to restore Springfield's industrial base by investing in a spot where that history took place, according to Brad Pepper, Topre America vice president.

"As we started listening to the history and spent more time in Springfield," Pepper told Automotive News, "the nostalgia of the whole situation started to resonate with our group. It made sense that 'Hey, this is a chance to go in and revitalize the site,' because it's never going to be used for anything else but manufacturing," Pepper said.

International Harvester's presence in Springfield dated to the 1800s. The 19th-century architecture is visible in buildings near Topre's site.

"It started to mean something when you talk to people around town that are second, third and fourth generation that worked on the site," Pepper said.

But attracting Topre took more than nostalgia.

Hobbs: "A huge shot in the arm"

The site was contaminated after decades of industrial use. Springfield, along with Harvester — by then renamed Navistar — invested in site cleanup to make it commercially viable again, said Horton Hobbs, vice president of economic development for the Chamber of Greater Springfield, Ohio. The cleanup was completed in 2011, and the property was then marketed as an industrial site called the Champion City Business Park.

The latest Topre expansion requires it to fill the park.

Hobbs said Topre's investment is "a huge shot in the arm" for Springfield.

"In a year and a half, we've gone from no interest in a park to fully occupying the park, with 315,000 square feet of space committed, 289 employees and about $130 million of investment."

Fast-growing Topre














 U.S. sales
2004$50 million
2017$330 million
You can reach Jack Walsworth at jwalsworth@crain.com -- Follow Jack on Twitter: @jackwalsworth

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