Black Country-based Millennium Assemblies, which was founded last year to look for opportunities to work alongside Millennium Pressed Metal's established business, has purchased JJ Engineering from the administrators. It is now planning to use the additional capacity to embark on a two-year plan to enhance joint sales revenue to £10 million.
As part of the move JJ Engineering will be renamed Millennium Assemblies and will sit alongside Millennium Pressed Metal to form the newly named Millennium Manufacturing Group.
Former Cab Automotive managing director John Faulkner will take the helm at the Garretts Green factory in co-ownership with managing director of Millennium Pressed Metal Anna Stevenson.
"JJ Engineering has a great workforce and a long history of supplying quality metal parts. The team shares our commitment to world class manufacturing, innovation and customer service and we are very proud to have created a new platform for the future," explained Faulkner.
He added: "Sister company Millennium Pressed Metal had picked up a number of large contracts, so the ability to further increase our capacity with the purchase of the JJ Engineering plant was too good to turn down. There is also the added benefit of now being able to offer robotic welding, a well-equipped tool room and state-of-the-art metrology lab.
"It has an enviable client base of automotive, domestic goods and construction customers, not to mention a presence in oil and gas…all areas we are looking to gain a greater market share in."
Millennium Manufacturing Group will employ 84 people across the two manufacturing sites and is set to turn over more thanf £7m in the next 12 months.
The two companies offer pressed metal components, machined parts, tube manipulation, wire forms and welded assemblies.
Stevenson said: "We now have more than 65 presses (from 25 to 350 tonnes) at our disposal. The acquisition comes on the back of the most successful twelve months in our 15 year history and just a few months after securing one of our biggest contracts – a £1.3m order to manufacture white goods pressings."