Today, Hadrian, the advanced manufacturing company building AI-powered factories for America, announced plans to establish a large-scale manufacturing and software hub, known as Factory 3 (F3) in Mesa, Arizona. The 270,000-square foot facility represents a $200 million investment, which will support raw materials to complete mission-critical systems. Expected to be fully operational in early 2026, the facility will create 350 new jobs.
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In addition, Hadrian announced a total $260 million in new capital and expansions of its footprint in California and Arizona, which will support significant new manufacturing space, expanded R&D capacity, and dedicated teams focused on shipbuilding and naval defense production.
“Arizona is at the heart of America’s national defense,” said Governor Katie Hobbs. “We continue to be a premier destination for the fast-growing aerospace and defense industry. This new investment will further solidify our state’s leadership and provide family-sustaining jobs for Arizonans.”
“America cannot afford to lose another generation of industrial capacity,” said Chris Power, Founder and CEO of Hadrian. “We’re building the factories that will secure American leadership in advanced manufacturing and create new jobs here in the United States. China is making massive bets on industrial dominance. The United States needs to respond not just with policy, but with production. That’s what Hadrian is here to do.”
Hadrian also announced the following:
- The company has initiated the search for its 400,000-square-foot corporate and R&D headquarters to support the rapid hiring of thousands of employees, slated to be fully operational by January 2026.
- Hadrian Maritime, a dedicated division bringing Hadrian’s autonomous factory model to shipbuilding and naval defense, strengthening maritime supply chains with scalable, precision production. Maritime is the first in a series of new dedicated divisions. In the coming months, Hadrian will announce additional production initiatives focused on Munitions, Missile Systems, and Uncrewed Aerial Systems, expanding its footprint across the defense industrial base.
- The launch of Factories-as-a-Service, a model that allows defense primes and other industries to scale factories to meet existing or new Program of Record (POR) demand for parts, assemblies, or entire products.
The capital raise includes $260 million in Series C financing led by existing investors Founders Fund and Lux Capital, and factory expansion loan facility arranged by Morgan Stanley. This capital will accelerate Hadrian’s ability to deliver not just precision parts but full mission-critical systems. The company now covers the entire advanced manufacturing stack, from raw material to finished products, and supports everything from components to assemblies to complete platforms. With its Factories-as-a-Service model, Hadrian can rapidly scale production across key Department of Defense (DOD) areas such as munitions, shipbuilding, and other high-priority programs.
“Arizona’s thriving aerospace and defense sector plays a critical role in creating good-paying jobs and ensuring our national defense,” said Sandra Watson, President and CEO, Arizona Commerce Authority. “With a commitment to innovation and manufacturing excellence, Hadrian will strengthen Arizona’s aerospace and defense industry and we are grateful the company chose Mesa for its advanced manufacturing facility.”
“Greater Phoenix is known internationally as a hub for innovation, and Hadrian is leveraging the region’s advantages for its transformative F3 in Mesa,” said Chris Camacho, President and CEO, Greater Phoenix Economic Council. “The company’s growth plans in manufacturing, research, software, autonomous shipbuilding and more will be powered by the operating environment and talented workforce of Greater Phoenix, and we’re excited to welcome their forward-thinking technological strategies to the region.”
“Mesa is proud to welcome Hadrian’s Factory 3 to our city. This $200 million investment and the creation of 350 high-wage jobs reinforce Mesa’s growing reputation as a national hub for advanced manufacturing and defense innovation,” said Mesa Mayor Mark Freeman. “Hadrian’s presence marks a major step forward in strengthening America’s industrial base and Mesa is honored to help lead that charge.”
“Hadrian’s decision to build Factory 3 in Mesa further establishes our city as a leading destination for innovation and advanced manufacturing,” said Mesa Vice Mayor Scott Somers. “This significant investment will bring hundreds of high-quality jobs to Mesa residents, strengthen our local economy and reinforce our position as a critical hub in America’s manufacturing resurgence. We’re excited to welcome Hadrian to our community and look forward to supporting their growth and success for years to come.”
Greg Matter, Kyle Westfall, Eric Turner, Meredith O’Connor and Ada Wong of JLL represented Hadrian in its Mesa, Arizona lease. Hadrian will locate into Building A at The Cubes Mesa Gateway, a two-building Class A industrial project by CRG Integrated Real Estate Solutions. JLL’s Steve Larsen, Pat Harlan and Jason Moore are the property’s exclusive listing brokers.
“This lease marks a transformational moment for Hadrian, accelerating their long-term vision and establishing their presence in Mesa’s dynamic defense and aerospace landscape,” said Greg Matter, Vice Chairman of JLL. “We’re honored to support their next chapter.”
Powered by Opus, Hadrian’s proprietary software stack for production autonomy, the company’s factories are built to go online in under six months, creating resilient supply chains, high-skill jobs, and mission-critical components faster than legacy manufacturing systems can deliver.
Since its Series B raise 12 months ago, Hadrian has achieved 10x year-over-year growth, establishing itself as the company with the scale and capability to build AI-driven factories that can produce everything from flight hardware to frontier technology. This announcement is just the beginning. Over the next year, Hadrian plans to announce and scale four to five additional facilities, each focused on accelerating production in high-demand defense sectors and supporting priority DOD initiatives.