Joby acquires facility in Ohio, scales up eVTOL aircraft manufacture
Existing facility at Dayton International Airport will enable 500 eVTOLs per year, serving as Joby’s initial manufacturing footprint in the region.
Joby’s pilot production line in Marina, California, with two of the company’s prototype aircraft. Source | Joby Aircraft
(Santa Cruz, Calif., U.S.) has officially acquired an existing facility at Dayton International Airport and begun hiring in support of the company’s initial manufacturing operations in Dayton, Ohio. The company announced in September 2023 that it had selected Dayton as the location for its scaled manufacturing facility, capable of producing up to 500 electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft per year.
The facility will be fitted out to support initial manufacturing operations in Dayton, which are expected to begin later this year, supporting the manufacture of aircraft parts for Joby’s pilot production line in Marina, California
Joby’s acquisition of the on-airport facility is the first step in the company’s plan to develop facilities capable of building up to 500 aircraft per year in Dayton, which is expected to include the design and construction of a larger greenfield factory. “We’re pleased to be able to acquire an underutilized facility at Dayton International Airport and repurpose it as a modern, high-tech manufacturing center to serve as our initial manufacturing footprint in the region,” says Didier Papadopoulos, president of aircraft OEM at Joby.
Joby’s electric air taxi is designed to carry a pilot and four passengers at speeds of up to 200 miles per hour offering high-speed mobility with low noise and zero operating emissions.
Related Content
-
Vertical Aerospace eVTOL prototype goes down during uncrewed test flight
The U.K. company has confirmed the Aug. 9 accident that resulted in significant aircraft damage and potential setbacks.
-
Paris Air Show 2023 highlights
The Paris Air Show, one of the largest aerospace trade shows in the world, returned for the first time since 2019 and proved that the global aviation industry industry is very much alive and kicking.
-
Joby conducts FAA testing, moves into final certification
Successful static loading testing of tail structure and Type Inspection Authorization by FAA pilots moves Joby closer to its 2025 targets.