Janicki selects Great Falls for $830 million expansion

Four technicians in white coveralls install an orange-framed curved panel into a giant circular industrial vessel.

This story will be updated

Janicki Industries has selected Great Falls for its $830 million expansion.

John Janicki announced during the Great Falls Development Alliance annual meeting on June 2 that after months of research, the company selected the 185.5 acre parcel in AgriTech industrial park on the east side of the city over Twin Falls/Jerome, Idaho.

“We’re super excited to be part of your community,” John Janicki said. “We’re gonna move pretty fast.”

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“Someone was very thoughtful years ago in putting this alliance together to be able to purchase this land and get it ready for a company like ours,” John Janicki said of GFDA and their development of the AgriTech Park.

“The fact that we can move so quickly was a big driver in our decision,” John Janicki said. “We found a little diamond, I think, in Great Falls. There’s probably going to be a bunch of aerospace following into Montana.”

The $800 million investment will add 2 million square feet of production space over the next decade. Janicki expects to create 1,000 new jobs within the first five years, with total employment exceeding 2,000 jobs once campus construction is complete, according to the company.

Janicki said construction is expected to begin in July, with the first phase of the campus opening by the end of 2027.

Gov. Greg Gianforte said “we’re just thrilled” that Janicki selected Great Falls.

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Janicki has locations in Washington and Utah and for more than 33 years, the company has designed and built composite and metallic tooling, parts, prototypes and assembled structures for many industries and is one of the largest privately owned Tier 1 aerospace suppliers in the U.S., according to the company.

Janicki has made significant investments, scaling from about 900 employees in 2022 to nearly 1,900 by the end of 2025, with more than a million square feet for manufacturing space, but “demand for Janicki’s capabilities continues to outpace capacity,” according to the company.

Great Falls a finalist for Janicki Industries expansion

Janicki evaluated several states before issuing requests for information and company representatives visited communities to narrow their choice down to Great Falls and Twin Falls.

The company is applying for state and local tax incentives and “pursuing infrastructure support to offset site development costs,” according to a release.

In mid-May, Great Falls City Commissioners and Cascade County Commissioners approved tax abatements for Janicki.

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Jolene Schalper, Great Falls Development Alliance executive vice president, said in a May email that advanced manufacturing is underrepresented in the regional economy and provides high-wage jobs and benefits, “primary sector income coming from outside our community; opportunities for supply chain partnerships; and economic diversification and resilience.”

She wrote that speed to market is a factor in Janicki’s decision-making process so having shovel-ready sites in AgriTrch kept Great Falls in the competition.

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The company designs and builds composite and metallic tooling, parts, prototypes, and assembled structures, including fly-away parts and large-scale, high-precision assemblies, Erin Hurley, Janicki’s marketing manager, told The Electric in May.

She said many of their programs are proprietary, but they support some of the largest and most advanced programs in air, sea and space in the U.S.

One of those projects is NASA’s Artemis mission.

Janicki has supplied tooling and parts in support of the Artemis program and its predecessor missions.

The company’s work with NASA goes back at least a decade and includes manufacturing the composite diaphragm for the Orion stage adapter, which serves as a critical barrier between propellant gases and the crew compartment during launch.

The company also developed composite tooling for the Space Launch System payload fairing.

Hurley told The Electric that she isn’t able to comment on specific programs but didn’t believe Janicki is involved in the Sentinel intercontinental ballistic missile transition underway at Malmstrom Air Force Base.

Hurley told The Electric that Great Falls is under consideration for several reasons as large-scale manufacturing depends on reliable, fairly priced access to power, water, transportation, construction and workforce housing.

“Workforce availability and proximity to our current sites and customers were also evaluated. The hospitality we’ve received from local government, economic development partners, and the governor’s office has been outstanding. Their commitment to growing the community and strengthening the regional economy is another significant factor in our decision,” Hurley said.

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She told The Electric in May that the majority of roles would be skilled manufacturing and engineering, along with support positions in facilities, supply chain, and administration.

At their existing facilities in Washington and Utah, Hurley said Janicki partners directly with local schools and technical programs to build their talent pipeline, and Hurley said they’d plan to do the same in any new community.

Janicki hires at both entry and skilled levels and “we take pride in training our employees to succeed in their roles and grow their careers with us,” Hurley said.

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The company’s goal is to “build a workforce rooted in the local community. We may relocate a small number of experienced team members to help establish operations and train new employees, but the majority of positions will be filled locally,” Hurley told The Electric.

Schalper wrote that if Great Falls is selected, the company will need temporary housing for 12-24 team members who will be rotating in and out of town, working on the project over the next year; and temporary office space and a large training space to get project work underway in a training environment.