May 24, 2016

Toyota Marking 20 Years Since Work Started On Indiana Plant

2014 Highlanders roll down the production line at Toyota’s Indiana plant in December 2013. - Toyota Indiana

2014 Highlanders roll down the production line at Toyota’s Indiana plant in December 2013.

Toyota Indiana

PRINCETON, Ind. (AP) — Toyota is set to mark the 20th anniversary of when it started building what is now a 5,000-worker assembly plant in southwestern Indiana.

Construction began in May 1996 on the factory near Princeton. Toyota spent about $1.2 billion on the complex by the time it started production of full-size Tundra pickup trucks in late 1998.

Toyota says the factory has since produced 4.3 million vehicles, including Highlander and Sequoia SUVs and Sienna minivans.

Company executives are set to join state and local officials in a ceremony Wednesday at the factory's visitor center about 25 miles north of Evansville.

Toyota has expanded the plant several times, most recently with a $100 million project announced in 2014 to boost Highlander production.

Support independent journalism today. You rely on WFYI to stay informed, and we depend on you to make our work possible. Donate to power our nonprofit reporting today. Give now.

 

Related News

Local environmental groups urge Indianapolis to protect its urban forests
Doctor who performed autopsy says moving Whitfield could have helped him breathe
Lebanon City Council approves plans to incentivize Meta to build in Boone County