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A mold maker rebuilds, recovers from a roof collapse
 
 

By Kerri Jansen
STAFF REPORTER
Published: October 7, 2014 1:05 pm ET
Updated: October 7, 2014 1:16 pm ET


Image By: JK Machining Inc.
Mold maker JK Machining Inc. has been busy rebuilding after its roof collapsed due to heavy snow in February.


On a Tuesday afternoon in February, a crack appeared in the ceiling of JK Machining Inc. in Kalamazoo, Mich.

“It was about 4 o’clock in the afternoon,” recalled Henry Kalkman, JK Machining president. “Heard a loud noise, walked out in the manufacturing facility and saw my guys looking at a big crack in the ceiling, running the length of the building.”

As staff began to leave the building, a second crack appeared and spread toward the office area. Then, under the weight of an unusually heavy snowfall, the roof collapsed, crushing equipment and covering 5,000 square feet of manufacturing space in debris.

“That roof was carrying a snow load all winter long. A lot of times snow comes and goes, and I guess after having snow on it for four, five months, it finally decided it was time to give up,” Kalkman said.

All staff members made it out of the building without harm. Kalkman had returned to the office area, which remained intact.

After the collapse, JK Machining prioritized saving its in-progress work. The company makes injection molds for automotive, medical and furniture end markets.

“We had a crane on site by 8 o’clock that night, and the next morning we started lifting pieces of the roof and the rafters away so that we could get at all of our customers’ molds, and by the end of the day we had all of our customers’ molds out of our facility and into other local shops that helped us finish them,” he said.

JK Machining is a member of the Southwestern Michigan Tooling Coalition. The alliance helped make it possible to deliver all molds on time.

“Never missed a date, never missed a delivery,” Kalkman said. “It was survival mode; you don’t deliver late.”

Kalkman said he received offers of help from all over the state as the company salvaged what they could and set up shop in a temporary facility about 20 minutes away.

“We were able to save our manual machines,” he added. “Anything that was computer-driven, CNC, high-accuracy [had to be replaced]. We got all new high-speed mills, new EDMs, new wire machine, new CNC milling machines. Everything else was pretty much crushed.”


Image By: JK Machining Inc.
JK Machining expects to reopen an expanded facility by the end of the year.


JK Machining, which employs 16, is now rebuilding at the same location, with construction expected to be completed within the next month and a half. The original 5,000-square-foot manufacturing space will be replaced, plus an additional 3,500-square-foot expansion. Insurance covered replacement machines and the 5,000-square-foot construction; Kalkman is covering the cost of the additional space.

Kalkman said he had not been planning an expansion, but the new construction made it a practical choice.

“Everything’s out of the way; now’s a perfect time to add on,” he said.

The next challenge will be tearing down the company’s temporary shop and relocating it to the new building. But with the fresh start comes new opportunities.

“I’ve got all new machines. It’s going to change our capabilities. We’re going to be doing high-speed five-axis machining now,” Kalkman said. “We have updated machines, basically. Things have changed in 15 to 20 years.”

Kalkman expects to be operational in the new space by the end of this year.

 
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