Kodak expands digital plate production in Columbus, Georgia facility

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Kodak has completed the expansion of its digital plate production facility in Columbus, Georgia. Adding 26,000 square feet to the existing facility, Kodak is using this third production line to meet the digital plate supply needs of print service providers in a wide variety of markets.


‘It’s an exciting day for Kodak’s digital plate business and the people of Columbus,’ said David Wigfield, general manager, pre-press and digital printing, United States and Canada. ‘Kodak is committed to investing in new digital plate technologies, and this expansion allows us to build on a sustained strategy of enhancing our digital plate presence in the Americas while serving our customers as the complete solutions provider for their growing digital plate needs.’


Kodak’s investment in the new production line totals approximately $15 million and enables the company to produce more efficiently current and future generation digital plates. The increased plate production capacity will also bring additional employment opportunities to the greater Columbus area.


Kodak’s Columbus facility has 250 employees and now occupies 276,000 square feet. The expansion of the facility allows Kodak to invest in the latest digital plate technologies and to further the development of next-generation plates.


Kodak celebrated the completion of the facility expansion with a ribbon-cutting ceremony, which was attended by local dignitaries and business leaders, including Georgia’s US Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, Lt. governor Casey Cagle, Columbus mayor Jim Wetherington, and Mike Gaymon, president and CEO of the Greater Columbus Georgia Chamber of Commerce.


First opened in 1990 by Sun Chemical for the production of Polychrome-branded printing plates, the Columbus facility has undergone several previous improvements to increase production quality and capacity. Kodak entered into a joint venture with Sun Chemical in 1998 to form Kodak Polychrome Graphics, which in 2005 became a wholly owned subsidiary of Kodak. The facility currently produces a broad portfolio of conventional and digital plates.


In addition to the digital plate production facility in Columbus, Georgia, there are six other Kodak plate production facilities around the world, including: Osterode, Germany; Leeds, UK; Sofia, Bulgaria; Gunma, Japan; Windsor, Colorado, USA; and Xiamen, China.


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