A Government and industry funded National Centre for Additive Manufacturing at the Manufacturing Technology Centre (MTC) in Coventry has been formally opened today by Anna Soubry MP, Minister for Small Business Industry and Enterprise.
The launch of the National Centre for Net Shape and Additive Manufacturing at the MTC confirms the UK’s commitment to developing this ground-breaking technique. The aim is to develop production-ready additive manufacturing processes, to overcome barriers to wide-scale adoption, and to work on legislative and standardisation issues for this emerging technology.
The Centre has received £15 million of initial funding as part of a £2 billion joint Government and industry package to be invested over the next seven years to ensure that UK manufacturing industry retains its competitive edge.
The Aerospace Technology Institute provided £15.2 million funding for the new aerospace facility through the Government’s High Value Manufacturing Catapult and Innovate UK, formerly the Technology Strategy Board. This investment has been matched by funding from industry.
Ruth McKernan, chief executive of Innovate UK, said: “These ground-breaking facilities will further reinforce the MTC and the HVM Catapult’s capabilities as a world-class high value manufacturing research and technology organisation. Innovate UK is proud to be working with the Catapult to help drive forward national economic growth.”
The Aerospace Research Centre forms part of the MTC’s research and development campus, which will also include the MTC’s soon-to-be-completed Advanced Manufacturing Training Centre. This is said to tackle manufacturing skills shortage by training manufacturing engineering apprentices on a sponsored or part-sponsored basis, up-skilling manufacturing engineers, and developing graduate engineers and industrial designers.
The Manufacturing Technology Centre (MTC) was founded in 2010 following a £40 million investment from Advantage West Midlands and the East Midlands Development Agency. It is a partnership between some of the UK’s major global manufacturers and three forward-thinking universities: Birmingham, Nottingham and Loughborough as well as TWI Ltd, the operating division of The Welding Institute.
Since its formal opening in 2011, the MTC has grown to 350 members of staff and now has more than 80 industrial members, which include some of the UK’s major global manufacturers such as Rolls-Royce, Airbus, HP and GM.