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STAYTON, Ore. — Littau Harvester is expanding its production capabilities and preparing for an expected growth spurt by moving its assembly operation to a large warehouse it recently purchased several blocks from its main production facility.
Frank Brown, production and purchasing manager, said the addition of the new site will free up the main facility to focus on building modular components and will open the company up to the opportunity to produce significantly more harvesting equipment to more customers.
Littau purchased a 150,000-square-foot warehouse here on Wilco Road in January. The warehouse was formerly a mobile home production facility and sits on 10 acres.
Brown said he hopes the expansion will allow Littau to continue to innovate at a higher level and come up with machines that will cater to the upcoming labor shortage for farmers.
“We see another major hurdle for the farmers coming with some of the new laws that are in place,” Brown said. “Ten years ago, machines were just for clean up after crops had been picked. Now you have farmers who are picking 100 percent of their berries with a machine.”
Brown said Littau is working with individual customers on a prototype basis to develop machines that will meet their needs given recent labor shortages.
Littau builds approximately 60 harvesting machines a year. Brown said when assembly shared the same space as all the other departments, production was cramped and he had to turn away customers because the company did not have the space or manpower to take on more projects.
Brown said the assembly facility is still early in its development and is currently more of a crude assembly line. He would like to see it become the storage facility with racks and parts staged to be convenient as well as the new trucking facility.
This most recent facility is not the first big step toward expansion Littau has made since it was founded in Eugene Littau’s garage 50 years ago.
Littau bought his first industrial facility after his neighbors suggested he move the harvesting equipment he lined up down the street to a separate location. Since then, Brown said the company has experienced continuous growth and moved to and purchased several pieces of property as it has expanded.
In 2000, Littau sold the company to one of his employees, Norman Johnson, who had been working at the company since 1987.
Since buying Littau, Johnson has purchased three buildings.
“Norman has an exceptional vision of where the company needs to go to stay ahead,” Brown said. “Whatever it takes to keep ahead of the competition.”
