News & Features


Pulaski cements its furniture

Virginia Business

April 2005

The three historic districts that make up downtown Pulaski pay tribute to a prosperity once tied to railroads and coal. The town’s future, however, now lies in cement, specifically, fiber cement, a type of material used in interior and exterior home construction that doesn’t mildew, warp or burn. James Hardie Industries, the largest maker of such products in North America, plans to spend close to $100 million to build a major manufacturing facility in Pulaski Business Park.

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Construction, which will take up a 52-acre site and include two highly automated manufacturing lines, began in March. The first line is scheduled to be completed in early 2007 and will turn out exterior siding and backerboard, a protective cement board placed beneath kitchen and bathroom tile to guard against rot, swelling and water damage.

Louis Gries, CEO of James Hardie, says the project will create 200 jobs during the next 30 months and enable the company to meet rapidly growing demand on the East Coast. The jobs will pay $13 to $15 per hour plus benefits. When completed, the Pulaski facility will be the 10th — and largest — of the company’s North American manufacturing plants.