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Made in Colorado Awards 2023: Emerging Manufacturer

There’s a common misconception that the United States doesn’t manufacture much anymore. In reality, the country continues to out-manufacture China on a per capita basis, and domestic growth outpaced the global average for the first time in years in late 2022.

Colorado is a case in point. Data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis shows that employment in Colorado’s manufacturing sector peaked in 1998 at 192,200 workers. That plummeted to 122,200 employees in 2010, but the state’s manufacturing workforce has steadily grown to surpass 150,000 as of late 2023.

With these dynamics front and center, this year’s “Made in Colorado” profiles illuminate 10 of the state’s pioneering manufacturers, makers of whiskey, satellites and just about everything in between.

READ: Inside the Colorado Semiconductor Industry Renaissance — CHIPS Act Sparks Manufacturing Revival


EMERGING MANUFACTURER

WINNER — Prometheus Materials

Longmont, Colorado

Website: www.prometheusmaterials.com

Prometheus 1
Photo courtesy of Prometheus Materials.

A project by the University of Colorado and the U.S. Department of Defense’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) led to a method to decarbonize concrete.

DARPA “wanted to see if there was a way to use living materials and local sand … to create protective structures for troops and high-value assets,” says Loren Burnett, the company’s president and CEO.

Using algae and biomimicry that replicates the natural processes that create seashells and coral reefs, the researchers found that the algae sequestered carbon. “At the end, they realized, ‘Well, geez, not only did we create bioconcrete, but we created zero-carbon bioconcrete,’” Burnett says, noting that concrete and cement are responsible for 8 percent of global CO2 emissions.

The result wasn’t exactly what DARPA was looking for, but Burnett saw huge potential in pivoting the application from defense to construction and joined forces with the researchers to license the technology from CU and start the company in 2021.

Since raising an $8 million Series A round in 2022, the 16-employee company has established a pilot production facility in Longmont to grow algae and manufacture at a demonstration-level volume. Its first products, Bio-Blocks, are now being showcased during the Chicago Architecture Biennial in a spiral wall designed by global architectural leader Skidmore, Owings & Merrill.

“We’re in the process of raising a Series B round of funding that will enable us to complete a 35,000-square-foot bioconcrete production facility within about a 20-mile radius of our facility here in Longmont,” Burnett says.

Once the round closes, the catalog will expand in a big way, he adds. “We’re not a block company. That’s just our first form factor. We are a zero-carbon biocement and zero-carbon bioconcrete company that can make any number of different types of precast products that include blocks but certainly are not limited to that. Then, a year from now, we’ll be delivering our ready-mix version of bioconcrete.”

 

FINALIST — Friction Labs

Denver, Colorado

Website — www.frictionlabs.com

Friction All3 Boxes On Rock
Photo courtesy of Friction Labs.

Setting a new standard making chalk for athletes in need of a good grip, Friction Labs has grown dramatically since Kevin Brown and Keah Kalantari co-founded the company in 2014. Customers of the catalog of loose, liquid and disc chalks include rock climbers, weightlifters and gymnasts. 

FINALIST — Pretred

Aurora, Colorado

Website — www.pretred.com

Pretred 2
Photo courtesy of Pretred.

Recycling waste tires into barriers for highways, construction sites and other locations, Pretred launched its first manufacturing facility in Aurora in 2022. Every mile of barrier diverts more than 1.4 million pounds of waste tires from landfills or burning, with a 98 percent reduction in CO2 emissions from traditional concrete barriers. 

 

Denver-based writer Eric Peterson is the author of Frommer’s Colorado, Frommer’s Montana & Wyoming, Frommer’s Yellowstone & Grand Teton National Parks and the Ramble series of guidebooks, featuring first-person travelogues covering everything from atomic landmarks in New Mexico to celebrity gone wrong in Hollywood. Peterson has also recently written about backpacking in Yosemite, cross-country skiing in Yellowstone and downhill skiing in Colorado for such publications as Denver’s Westword and The New York Daily News. He can be reached at [email protected].

Made in Colorado 2022 — Most Innovative Manufacturer

All Made In Colorado’s winners and finalists have at least one thing in common: They all make products in Colorado. 

It underlines the sheer breadth of the products made in Colorado. While the Colorado manufacturing base is not as established as places like the Rust Belt and the Southeast, it is also unconstrained by tradition and underpinned by innovation.  

And that might be exactly what the domestic industry needs as it rides a winning streak fueled by the return of manufacturing from China and other overseas locales — no matter whether it lands in Detroit or Kremmling, Colorado. 

READ — Made in Colorado 2022: Emerging Manufacturer

 

MOST INNOVATIVE MANUFACTURER

WINNER — Vita Inclinata Technologies

Broomfield

Visitwww.vitatech.co  

Vita2

Chairman and CEO Caleb Carr co-founded Vita Inclinata after his friend died following an unsuccessful helicopter rescue in 2009. The tragic event led Carr to start developing load stabilization technologies for helicopters. 

After starting Vita Inclinata in 2015, Carr and co-founder and CTO Derek Sikora developed a game-changing unit with a propulsion system to replace the status quo: a rope dangling from the helicopter held by a person on the ground. 

“What that ends up causing is a delay of the aircraft sitting onsite, but it also naturally can cause injury and death,” says Carr. “The use of the rescue system eliminates both the need and the worry of having to use a rope to manipulate the load. It actually controls it, but arguably most importantly is you speed up what is normally a 20-minute mission down to a three- to five-minute mission.” 

In the construction market, it has the same impact: reducing risks of accidents while boosting crane utilization by about 30 percent, he adds. 

Now 91 employees, the company is growing with search-and-rescue systems, as well as sales to the military for use in Ukraine and the construction industry for load stabilization on cranes. Carr forecasts a 2,000 percent spike in revenue to about $30 million in 2022, followed by a 1,000 percent uptick in 2023. 

Relying on a far-ranging supply chain, Vita Inclinata assembles its systems in Broomfield, but more space is needed for a planned move into systems for wind turbine blades that will be “6 to 10 times the size of our current system,” says Carr. “We’re bursting at the seams in Colorado now, so we’re actively sourcing a new facility.”  

The location is yet to be determined. Carr says Denver’s location and workforce is ideal, but state support for Colorado-based companies looking to scale is lacking. “It’s one thing to entice companies to come to you. It’s a whole other thing to keep the ones that you have.” 

FINALIST — Forge Nano

Thornton

Visitwww.forgenano.com

Forge Nano

Founder and CEO Paul Lichty worked on nano-coating technology called atomic layer deposition (ALD) at CU Boulder, then bought the rights for a mere $1 to launch Forge Nano from his garage in 2011. The company has since commercialized the process for manufacturers of lithium-ion batteries, OLEDs and semiconductors.

FINALIST — Reynolds Polymer Technology

Grand Junction

Visitwww.reynoldspolymer.com

Reynolds Palmer Technology

The Western Slope manufacturer has been on the cutting edge of highly engineered acrylic and polymer for 35 years. Reynolds Polymer has plenty of superlatives in its cap: The company made the world’s largest aquarium windows while supplying acrylic to the largest dark matter experiment in the U.S.

 

Denver-based writer Eric Peterson is the author of Frommer’s Colorado, Frommer’s Montana & Wyoming, Frommer’s Yellowstone & Grand Teton National Parks and the Ramble series of guidebooks, featuring first-person travelogues covering everything from atomic landmarks in New Mexico to celebrity gone wrong in Hollywood. Peterson has also recently written about backpacking in Yosemite, cross-country skiing in Yellowstone and downhill skiing in Colorado for such publications as Denver’s Westword and The New York Daily News. He can be reached at [email protected]

Made in Colorado 2022 — Emerging Manufacturer

All Made In Colorado’s winners and finalists have at least one thing in common: They all make products in Colorado. 

It underlines the sheer breadth of the products made in Colorado. While the Colorado manufacturing base is not as established as places like the Rust Belt and the Southeast, it is also unconstrained by tradition and underpinned by innovation.  

And that might be exactly what the domestic industry needs as it rides a winning streak fueled by the return of manufacturing from China and other overseas locales — no matter whether it lands in Detroit or Kremmling, Colorado. 

READ — Made in Colorado 2022 — Top Food and Beverage Manufacturer

 

EMERGING MANUFACTURER

WINNER — Fading West Development

Buena Vista 

Visitwww.fadingwestdevelopment.com  

Fading West1

Fading West opened its 110,000-square-foot modular housing factory in Buena Vista in November 2021. Its first year was a bit of a doozy.

“It’s been a very changing startup year for sure,” says founder and CEO Charlie Chupp. “Just the environment of interest rates, employees, housing. Our mission is to create more affordable housing and workforce housing, and it’s one of our big limiting factors as well. We’re still dealing with COVID outbreaks.”

But that didn’t stop the 135-employee company from delivering upwards of 150,000 square feet of housing in year one as it scaled manufacturing capacity to 25,000 square feet a month. “The demand and need in the state has been overwhelming,” says Chupp. “We’ve been able to partner with some great groups around the state to impact communities and create more homes for people who wouldn’t be able to afford them.”

Fading West supplies its own development in Buena Vista, The Farm, and is also working on projects in Breckenridge, Vail and Gunnison. To meet demand, Fading West is adding a second shift in early 2023 that will boost capacity by more than 10,000 square feet a month. If all goes to plan, a pair of larger Fading West factories will open on the Front Range by 2024.

“Colorado is a challenging state to build in for traditional construction,” says Chupp. “We’re able to control those costs better just by the nature of manufacturing, and if we’re staying in the state, that allows us to minimize our transportation costs and allows us to be really effective in accomplishing our mission of creating more affordable housing.”

FINALIST — Spark Grills

Boulder

Visitwww.sparkgrills.com

Spark grill

Founded by Benjamin West in 2017, Spark is rethinking the charcoal grill as it expands its manufacturing footprint in Boulder. The startup’s proprietary Briqs are ready to go in about five minutes, and its grill allows for precise temperature control from 250 to 900 degrees Fahrenheit.

 

Meati FoodsFINALIST — Meati Foods

Boulder 

Visitwww.meati.com

 

Fermenting mushroom roots into protein products that mimic steak and chicken, Meati raised an eye-popping $150 million in July 2022 to accelerate production. Case in point: Slated for launch in late 2022, Meati’s 115,000-square-foot Mega Ranch facility in Thornton will have capacity to produce hundreds of millions of pounds annually.

 

 

Denver-based writer Eric Peterson is the author of Frommer’s Colorado, Frommer’s Montana & Wyoming, Frommer’s Yellowstone & Grand Teton National Parks and the Ramble series of guidebooks, featuring first-person travelogues covering everything from atomic landmarks in New Mexico to celebrity gone wrong in Hollywood. Peterson has also recently written about backpacking in Yosemite, cross-country skiing in Yellowstone and downhill skiing in Colorado for such publications as Denver’s Westword and The New York Daily News. He can be reached at [email protected]