Roseburg Announces Massive Investment
In a much-anticipated announcement, Roseburg Forest Products revealed in last week its plan to invest $700 million during the next four years to upgrade and expand its manufacturing operations in southern Oregon, including the construction of a MDF facility in Dillard, current site of multiple operations and where the company was founded nearly 90 years ago.
The total investment package includes the creation of two new manufacturing plants, and technological improvements and upgrades at existing plants in rural Douglas and Coos counties.
The total project represents the largest known investment in manufacturing in rural Oregon, and one of the largest private capital investments of any kind in the state’s history, according to Roseburg.
“Across the business, Roseburg is embracing advanced manufacturing and leveraging new technology and methods to make our current products and develop new ones, with the goal of ensuring we remain competitive in the global market,” Roseburg President and CEO Grady Mulbery said. “I want to thank our partners at the Governor’s office and Douglas and Coos counties for helping make this historic investment possible.”
Nearly 200 people gathered at the Douglas County Fairgrounds for the announcement. In attendance were Allyn Ford, Roseburg owner and board chairman, and representatives of the state and county agencies who worked with Roseburg on the project.
The investment includes two new highly technical manufacturing plants at the company’s Dillard Complex, located just south of Roseburg, Ore. Dillard MDF will use wood residuals from Roseburg’s local mills and other regional mill suppliers to manufacture standard medium density fiberboard (MDF) panels, as well as thin high-density fiberboard (HDF), often used in cabinetry, doors and other applications. The plant will produce panels with a thickness range from 2 mm to 28 mm.
“HDF is a new product for Roseburg that meets growing customer demand for domestically manufactured panels of increasing thinness and strength,” Mulbery said. “Dillard MDF will be one of the most technologically advanced plants of its kind in the world, and it alone represents $450 million of our $700 million investment.”
Dillard Components will convert specialty MDF panels manufactured at Roseburg’s MDF plant in Medford, Ore. into Armorite Trim, a finished exterior trim product for residential and shed use. This is an innovative, new product currently unavailable within the industry or market. Roseburg will invest roughly $50 million in this plant.
The two plants together will be capable of producing the following:
• MDF panels: 175MMSF per year on a ¾ in. basis, or 310,000 m3 per year
• Primed Armorite exterior trim: 70MMSF per year on a ¾ in. basis, or 124,000 m3 per year
• Interior molding: 90 million feet per year Roseburg currently owns and operates three MDF plants in North America.
Roseburg will build a MDF facility at its Dillard, Ore. complex.
The company anticipates that both new plants will begin operations in 2025, and will employ approximately 120 once completed.
The remaining $200 million of the investment will go toward improvements at existing Roseburg plants in Oregon over the next four years, including significant upgrades at its plywood plant in Riddle, Ore., including two new lathe lines and a new hardwood plywood line; and a new dryer at its plywood plant in Coquille, Ore.
“These operations are all key parts of our integrated platform in Oregon, starting with our timberlands, and including our primary processing plants making lumber and plywood, as well as our secondary plants that use wood residuals like sawdust and chips to make value-added products such as MDF, ensuring the full utilization of our precious timber resource,” Roseburg Director of Government Affairs Eric Geyer said.
In June 2022, Roseburg revealed that it was exploring the feasibility of locating an additional MDF plant or other residual-based operation within its Western operating footprint. That study, combined with a years-long strategic assessment of company operations across the state, resulted in the decision to make this investment in southern Oregon.
“Not only are we proud of our long history in this region, but our focus on advanced manufacturing and innovative technology makes us an excellent fit for the future of Oregon’s manufacturing sector as well,” Mulbery said. “Our use of robotics, computer programming, and other advanced manufacturing tools aligns Roseburg with the high-tech evolution of manufacturing in this state.”
Founded in 1936, Roseburg Forest Products is a privately-owned company and one of North America’s leading producers of particleboard, medium density fiberboard and thermally fused laminates. Roseburg also manufactures softwood and hardwood plywood, lumber, LVL and I-joists. The company owns and sustainably manages more than 600,000 acres of timberland in Oregon, North Carolina and Virginia, as well as an export wood chip terminal facility in Coos Bay, Ore.
Latest News
How CLT Could Change The U.S. Building Landscape
Project teams looking for building materials and systems with a lower environmental impact are increasingly eyeing wood — specifically cross-laminated timber (CLT), a type of mass timber that, research has shown, rivals concrete and steel in performance but has a...
Canfor Corp. Eyes U.S. Acquisitions Amid Lumber Duty Dispute
Canfor Corp., one of the world’s largest forestry companies, sees potential acquisition opportunities in the U.S. South as smaller companies struggle in the wake of carnage left by new softwood lumber duties. “We’ve got an appetite for [mergers and acquisitions],”...
Idaho Grant Helps College Train Woodworkers, Address Skill Gaps
North Idaho College has been awarded a $482,582 grant by the Idaho Department of Labor to train more than 200 workers in the wood products manufacturing industry. The two-year grant is a partnership with Lewis-Clark State College and five wood products manufacturing...
The Past Is Present
The Past Is PresentArticle by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief, Timber Processing May 2017 I am excited to hear about Bruce Vincent’s new book, “Against The Odds,” about which there’s more detail on page 72. If you’ve been around this industry for a couple of decades or...
Washington Sawmill Restarts Production, Brings Back Jobs
It was about a year ago that the owners of Montesano’s Mary’s River Lumber mill on State Route 107 announced it would close. As a result, 38 people lost their jobs, the city lost revenue and the facility basically went idle. In the case of mills, when they shut down,...
Roseburg’s Allyn Ford Talks Forestry, Wood Products At Chamber Meeting
Though the timber industry has faced recent challenges, Allyn Ford of Roseburg Forest Products has a positive outlook for the future of forestry. Ford discussed the state of the wood products industry at a Roseburg Area Chamber of Commerce meeting Monday at the...
Oregon’s Rough & Ready Lumber Coming Down
The Rough & Ready Lumber mill that shut down last fall after 73 years in operation still has plenty of metal buildings and odd scrap metal lying around. But the guts are gone, said Link Phillippi, one of the mill’s owners. Workers Wednesday dismantled the boilers,...
Biewer Lumber Opens State-Of-The-Art Sawmill In Mississippi
Biewer Lumber Opens State-Of-The-Art Sawmill In MississippiIn recent years the operation of sawmills has changed significantly, replacing the manual labor of earlier generations with modern technology – evident at the new state-of-the-art lumber mill in Newton. The...
Find Us On Social
Newsletter
The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.
Subscribe/Renew
Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.
Advertise
Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.