The company announced Wednesday plans for a 1.7-million square foot plant in Virginia, which will employ roughly 1,800 people once its completed in 2025. It will be the Danish company’s seventh global factory and second in North America — the other is located in Monterrey, Mexico.
Its sales jumped 27% last year driven by new store openings in China and customers flocking back to its reopened shops. The family-owned company said it had outpaced the toy industry in all major markets during the year, when sales of its plastic bricks totaled more than $8 billion.
“More and more families are falling in love with Lego building and we are looking forward to making Lego bricks in the US, one of our largest markets,” said CEO Niels B. Christiansen in a statement.
Building a factory in the US also helps the company meet demand here, particularly when supply chains are clogged and the cost to ship goods is surging amid record fuel prices.
“Our factories are located close to our biggest markets which shortens the distance our products have to travel,” said Lego COO Carsten Rasmussen, in the statement. “Our new factory in the US and expanded capacity at our existing site in Mexico means we will be able to best support long-term growth in the Americas.”
Christiansen also noted that Virginia was chosen for the carbon-neutral factory because it allows them to “build a solar park which supports our sustainability ambitions and provides easy links to country-wide transportation networks.”
The company currently employs 2,600 people in the United States and has more than 100 shops.
— Reuters contributed to this report.