Siemens announced on May 4, 2026, that it has reached $1 billion in domestic manufacturing investments in the United States over the past five years. The projects, set to come online throughout 2026, include sites in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Buffalo Grove, Illinois; and Fort Worth, Texas. The investments cover facilities supporting critical power equipment and passenger rail manufacturing. They target growth areas including data centers and AI factories, healthcare, passenger rail, semiconductors, and utilities. Specific projects include:
- $165 million for electrical equipment manufacturing expansions and new sites in North and South Carolina to support AI and data center markets.
- $190 million for a new 500,000-square-foot data center infrastructure manufacturing facility in Fort Worth, Texas, focused on low-voltage switchboards.
- $220 million for a new greenfield passenger rail manufacturing hub in Lexington, North Carolina, to build passenger rail coaches.
- $95 million for electrical infrastructure manufacturing in Pomona, California, including a new greenfield site and upgrades to create a combined 146,000-square-foot campus for low-voltage electrical equipment.

These investments are projected to add more than 2,200 jobs by 2028 in areas such as advanced manufacturing, skilled trades, engineering, and logistics. The company’s U.S. operations support more than 16,000 American suppliers, including many small and mid-sized businesses.
Siemens facilities incorporate the company’s industrial software and automation technologies. This includes Technomatix software for 3D digital twins to simulate, validate, and commission production processes, and Insights Hub for real-time operational dashboards monitoring machine performance and effectiveness.
The expanded footprint spans California, Illinois, Texas, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, New York, and the Carolinas. Select facilities feature carbon neutral operations, all-electric systems, on-site PV microgrid systems, and integrated EV chargers as part of the company’s goal to reach net-zero carbon by 2030.
“Siemens has been helping to build and support America's industrial backbone as long as we've been a company, more than 175 years,” said Ann Fairchild, president and CEO of Siemens USA. “These investments and those we anticipate in the years ahead reflect our commitment to serving U.S. customers, the continued growth we see in the U.S. market, and our pride in supporting a strong, innovative domestic manufacturing base that is essential to America’s long-term competitiveness and resilience.”





