YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio – The owners of JuggerBot3D, having just purchased one building, say they already are looking at the possibility of additional purchases to accommodate their company’s growth and that of other companies.

Yo Industrial Holdings LLC, which is owned by JuggerBot partners Zac DiVencenzo and Dan Fernback, closed Oct. 22 on its purchase of 8469 Southern Blvd., Boardman, which previously was occupied by Spirex and Xaloy.

Yo Industrial Holdings purchased the 24,000-square-foot building for $975,000 in a transaction recorded Oct. 22.

JuggerBot, headquartered in the Youngstown Business Incubator’s Tech Block Building #5, now occupies about 5,000 square feet of space there and has plans to double that, DiVencenzo, its president, says.

“Over the past six to nine months, we knew that we would need to expand. Juggerbot needs to start growing into a space that allows us to build larger equipment. If you went through our facility now, you would see we’re pretty much packed into what we’re capable of doing there,” he says.

The expansion in Boardman “is going to be great for the number of people that we have on staff” and those the company expects to hire over the next year. Its existing space is insufficient “for both the quantity of our current product line that we’re building” as well as for new work, says Fernback, its vice president. 

The company, an original equipment manufacturer that specializes in large-format additive manufacturing systems, received a $4 million contract in February to develop equipment for the Air Force Research Laboratory and Wright Patterson Air Force Base.

Through contacts with the Youngstown/Warren Regional Chamber and Platz Realty Group, the JuggerBot partners were able to identify the Southern Boulevard building that DiVencenzo calls a “diamond in the rough.”

JuggerBot began leasing space there in May with the intent of eventually purchasing it.

Based on the company’s growth, “before you know it, we’ll be looking at our next building,” Fernback says.

“We can both agree on that. And it’s not just JuggerBot,” DiVencenzo adds.  

The partners, who both are from the Mahoning Valley, are committed to helping other area businesses, which was one of the intentions behind forming the holding company, they say. JuggerBot recently marked 10 years in business.

“This is our time to show that we’re expanding, that we’re growing, and there’s other companies that will be growing and expanding here as well,” DiVencenzo says.

“The idea of cohabitation is fruitful for not just us, but for anyone else who is looking to grow and not ready to commit to massive buildings, or don’t have all the funds to do everything. There are synergies that we can have a similar space and have similar needs,” he continued. “And we are able to support, when needed, the growth of those businesses within those buildings.”

Also based at Southern Boulevard is Ursa Major, another tenant of YBI’s Tech Block Building #5. Ursa Major, established an R&D center in the Southern Boulevard building to advance additive manufacturing and materials development technology. The company focuses on liquid-fuel rocket engines and solid rocket motors.  

Between the two companies, 75% of the space is spoken for. Fernback says he expects JuggerBot will need the remaining space. He also affirms that JuggerBot has no plans to leave its YBI space downtown.

“It’s set up well for what we have in the near future,” he says.