Autocam Medical invests $70M to build medical device manufacturing facility in Indiana 

The new facility will serve as a major production hub and talent recruitment center for orthopedic manufacturing. 
July 18, 2025
2 min read

Autocam Medical has announced plans to build a 100,000-square-foot medical device manufacturing facility in Warsaw, Indiana. The company, which produces precision-machined components for medical devices, is investing more than $70 million into the project and expects to create up to 300 new high-skill jobs. 

Construction is set to begin in 2025, with completion and occupancy anticipated within 12 to 18 months of groundbreaking. The facility will be located on a 15-acre parcel at the northeast corner of N 200W and US-30. Designed to support both production and recruitment efforts, the site will sit along a high-traffic corridor to boost visibility and strengthen brand impact. 

Autocam Medical selected Warsaw for its strong base of orthopedic manufacturing expertise, access to key customers and suppliers, and highly skilled workforce. The facility will support roles including CNC machinists, engineers, and other technical and manufacturing positions. 

What people are saying 

In a recent quote, John C. Kennedy, Chief Executive Officer, Autocam Medical, said, “Warsaw offers a workforce with technical excellence in the medical device space and unique industry leadership. That's exactly the kind of environment where we want to invest. We are thrilled to expand in the Warsaw community and contribute to its continued leadership in orthopedic innovation.” 

Manufacturers investing in Indiana 

BWF Envirotec invests $9M to build filtration manufacturing facility in Indiana 
The project will bring 60 new jobs to the City of Greendale, with average annual wages and benefits of around $75,000. 

Roche invests $550M to build continuous glucose monitoring manufacturing facility in Indiana 
The expansion will strengthen domestic production and create hundreds of skilled manufacturing jobs in Indianapolis. 

Guardian Bikes invests $19M to launch bicycle frame manufacturing facility in Indiana 
The new facility will use robotic welding and advanced laser-cutting technology to produce bike frames at scale using domestic materials. 

Investing in American manufacturing in 2025 

This map shows where manufacturers are choosing to invest their resources, whether they are building new production facilities or expanding existing plants. 

About the Author

Alexis Gajewski

Senior Content Strategist

Alexis Gajewski has over 15 years of experience in the maintenance, reliability, operations, and manufacturing space. She joined Plant Services in 2008 and works to bring readers the news, insight, and information they need to make the right decisions for their plants. Alexis also authors “The Lighter Side of Manufacturing,” a blog that highlights the fun and innovative advances in the industrial sector. 

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