Plastic manufacturing plant to open in Louisville
A leading manufacturer of plastic containers, Ring Container Technologies, is opening a facility in Louisville.
Ring is retrofitting a 125,590-square-foot structure as per the company’s general plans for continual expansion and strategic growth throughout the country. This plant will be the 19th for the company and the first to deal with Ring’s newest breakthrough technology, which will be announced during the last quarter of this year.
Banner printing services are often employed when a new business, or a new location for an established business, will be opening soon.
By opening a Louisville location, Ring will no longer need to transport product by the truckloads from other Midwest plants and thereby significantly cut back diesel fuel usage and associated pollutants. Moreover, the new plant will utilize materials and equipment that reduce energy usage.
Ring’s Vice President of Engineering, Kevin Frye, expressed the company’s feeling in the press release regarding its new facility in Louisville:
Louisville’s own Senator Perry Clark was enthusiastic about Ring Container Technologies opening a facility here. He expressed the belief that existing Jefferson County companies will benefit and that Ring’s new plant will provide a boost to the local economy. The new jobs provided will be especially welcome by the area’s skilled workers.
Ring is retrofitting a 125,590-square-foot structure as per the company’s general plans for continual expansion and strategic growth throughout the country. This plant will be the 19th for the company and the first to deal with Ring’s newest breakthrough technology, which will be announced during the last quarter of this year.
Banner printing services are often employed when a new business, or a new location for an established business, will be opening soon.
By opening a Louisville location, Ring will no longer need to transport product by the truckloads from other Midwest plants and thereby significantly cut back diesel fuel usage and associated pollutants. Moreover, the new plant will utilize materials and equipment that reduce energy usage.
Ring’s Vice President of Engineering, Kevin Frye, expressed the company’s feeling in the press release regarding its new facility in Louisville:
"We're excited to expand into this region, as it exemplifies our commitment to the environment and sustainable business practices."
Louisville’s own Senator Perry Clark was enthusiastic about Ring Container Technologies opening a facility here. He expressed the belief that existing Jefferson County companies will benefit and that Ring’s new plant will provide a boost to the local economy. The new jobs provided will be especially welcome by the area’s skilled workers.