Haddy opens new microfactory, expanding 3D printing capacity

AI-powered manufacturing becomes symbol of America’s reindustrialization.

Haddy has opened its new microfactory, now among the largest 3D printing facilities globally. With this launch and in light of recent trade and tariff developments, the facility becomes a symbol of the next era of American manufacturing.

The AI-powered factory has 16 times the production capacity of its nearest 3D printing competitor and shows the future of manufacturing that is fast, scalable, and radically adaptive. Designed to prove that the U.S. can lead again in how things are made, the facility combines robotics, AI-driven production, and fully recyclable materials to deliver industrial-grade products faster, cleaner, and closer to where they’re needed.

Haddy CEO Jay Rogers spoke exclusively to BBC News about the launch.


From Furniture to the Future

Initially focused on producing design-forward furniture, Haddy is now expanding into high-impact sectors like national defense, disaster recovery, construction, and beyond. Whether printing battlefield-ready gear, modular housing components, or mobile infrastructure, Haddy’s technology offers a new blueprint for agile, on-demand production.

Reindustrialization…Reimagined

The new microfactory will break records in the 3D printing industry. Haddy believes it also marks the transition of 3D printing from narrow use cases to mass production. The St. Petersburg location boasts the following:

  • World’s largest 3D printing facility (based on total throughput and machine count);
  • 4-6x more output per robot than standard systems;
  • 100% recyclable, sustainable materials; and
  • Robots capable of producing everything from furniture and home construction components to defense assets.

For more information, visit haddy.life.